Injection Moulding Asia Energy
Economic opportunities for smart grids in Asia Smart Grid technology can help Asia’s power
Southeast Asia: prime investment for Smart Grid argeting power efficiency requires amped up infrastructure. Latest technologies provide better access to electricity and enable consumers to maximise the benefits of having stable and sufficient power supply for homes, businesses and utilities. The increase of investments into the Smart Grid technology in the region is expected to meet the increasing demand for higher delivery quality of electricity, not only to households but to power enterprises. This need is especially significant in ventures that involve machinery, transportation and communication, which are the key drivers to industry growth. Southeast Asia is a centriole for Smart Grid. The study report released by US-based market research firm, Northeast Group, covering the periods 2016-2026, says that the region’s maturing Smart Grid market provides progressive potential for power consumers and vendors alike. The regional study, which covers nine countries that include Singapore, Thailand, Malaysia, Philippines, Indonesia, Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos and Myanmar, states that nearly US$25 billion will be invested into Smart Grids over the next decade. Along with the installation of Smart Grid technologies, the directions towards it also mean that governments have to lay out Smart Grid roadmaps and deployment plans. Singapore has already begun deploying Smart Grid, and other countries are following, including Malaysia, which has set deployment plans for rolling out over 8 million of so-called Advanced Metering Infrastructure (AMI) metres. Thailand has put up a number of pilot projects that will total over 1 million AMI metres. The rest of the region is being supported by external aid to start Smart Grid deployment, the report says. Southeast Asia is found to have the highest projected GDP growth rate of all emerging Smart Grid markets, outside China and India. All the countries, except for Singapore and Thailand, will see GDP growth rates average near or above 5% per year through 2020, Northeast Group predicts, but it also says that these high GDP growth rates are not guaranteed, and will present structural, political, and social challenges to Southeast Asian countries.
T
sector to meet the region’s mounting electricity demand, sustainably and economically, says Angelica Buan in this report.
Extra demand for electricity in Asian households long with the growing industrialisation, the increasing urbanisation is also putting more demand on the power sector. A US Environment Information Administration (EIA) report indicates that the power sector accounts for 52% of the increase in primary energy demand in Southeast Asia in the New Policies Scenario offered in the report. The latter serves as the baseline scenario of the EIA, taking into account the policies and plans set by respective countries, highlighting its importance in the overall energy outlook. Southeast Asia’s final electricity consumption, which excludes transmission losses and other non-final uses, is also rising by 4.2% per year on average, over the period 2011-2030 covered in the report. Citing, too, the Asian Development Bank (ADB) Energy Outlook 2013 report, the region’s electricity demand is pegged to more than double between 2010-2035, reaching 16,169.2 TWh in 2035. ADB adds that this requires energy generation, transmission and distribution processes to adopt climate-smart initiatives and more efficient ways of balancing the demand and supply requirements of energy services. Of the major end-use sectors, household consumption of electricity is increasing the fastest, and being induced by higher standards of living owing to the increasing GDP, urbanisation and expanding access to electricity. Meanwhile, market demand for electricity in the entire Asia Pacific region is also at high levels owing to the rising consuming sectors in the region, Technavio stated in its global instrument transformer market report, covering the periods 2016-2020. Private players in the power sector play key role in sustaining the efficient production and distribution of electricity; and thus help lower the total cost of electricity and promote fair market competition in the sector.
A
1 AU G U ST 2 016
www.injectionmouldingasia.com