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Difference between revisions of "Publication - Southeast Asia Energy Outlook 2017"

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(Created page with "{{Pub Database |Pub Title=Southeast Asia Energy Outlook 2017 |Pub Organization=International Energy Agency |Pub Author=Tim Gould, Ali Al-Saffar, Toshiyuki Shirai, Ian Cronsha...")
 
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{{Pub Database
 
{{Pub Database
 
|Pub Title=Southeast Asia Energy Outlook 2017
 
|Pub Title=Southeast Asia Energy Outlook 2017
|Pub Organization=International Energy Agency
+
|Pub Organization=IEA
|Pub Author=Tim Gould,  Ali Al-Saffar, Toshiyuki Shirai, Ian Cronshaw, Tae-Yoon Kim, Gee Yong Law, Melanie Slade, Cecilia Tam, Johannes Trueby, Brent Wanner, Matthew Wittenstein and Aang Darmawan
+
|Pub Author=IEA
|Pub Month=January
+
|Pub Month=October
|Pub Year=2018
+
|Pub Year=2017
|Pub Abstract=The ten countries of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) represent one of
+
|Pub Abstract=With a total population of 640 million, about 65 million do not have access to electricity and 250 million are reliant as solid biomass as cooking fuel in Southeast Asia. The energy demand is expected to grow by two-thirds in the period to 2040, particularly the electricity demand due to a rising middle class population. Electro mobility does not gain much of a foothold in the projects. These are some of the findings of the Energy Outlook 2017.
the most dynamic parts of the global energy system, with their energy demand growing by
+
|Pub Topics=Renewable Energy
60% in the past 15 years. ASEAN countries are at various stages of economic development
+
|Pub Download=https://www.iea.org/publications/freepublications/publication/WEO2017SpecialReport_SoutheastAsiaEnergyOutlook.pdf
and have different energy resource endowments and consumption patterns. But they also
 
share a common challenge to meet rising demand in a secure, affordable and sustainable
 
manner. Ensuring sufficient investment in energy supply and energy efficiency is central to
 
this task. These countries have made major efforts in recent years to upgrade policy
 
frameworks, reform fossil-fuel consumption subsidies, increase regional co-operation and
 
encourage greater investment in the region’s considerable renewable energy potential.
 
While there are many encouraging signs, much more remains to be done. Access to
 
modern energy is incomplete. With a total population of nearly 640 million, an estimated
 
65 million people remain without electricity and 250 million are reliant on solid biomass as
 
a cooking fuel. Investment in upstream oil and gas has been hit by lower prices since 2014
 
and the region faces a dwindling position as a gas exporter, and a rising dependency on
 
imported oil. At the same time, energy-related air pollution, both indoor and outdoor, also
 
presents major risks to public health, while rising carbon-dioxide (CO2) emissions are
 
contrary to the objectives of the Paris Climate Change Agreement, which has been ratified
 
by all the countries in the region. Our analysis in this World Energy Outlook (WEO) Special
 
Report confirms that Southeast Asian countries are looking towards a future in which
 
energy demand is set to grow strongly. Our aim in this analysis is to provide a framework
 
for understanding the region’s energy choices, examining the pitfalls and opportunities that
 
lie ahead and what different pathways might imply for future energy security, the
 
environment and economic development.  
 
|Pub Topics=Climate Change, Energy Efficiency, Energy Access, Renewable Energy, Other
 
|Pub Download=http://sun-connect-news.org/fileadmin/DATEIEN/Dateien/New/WEO2017SpecialReport_SoutheastAsiaEnergyOutlook.pdf
 
 
|Pub Newsletter=No
 
|Pub Newsletter=No
 
}}
 
}}

Revision as of 12:49, 21 January 2018

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Title
Southeast Asia Energy Outlook 2017
Publisher
IEA
Author
IEA
Published in
October 2017
Abstract
With a total population of 640 million, about 65 million do not have access to electricity and 250 million are reliant as solid biomass as cooking fuel in Southeast Asia. The energy demand is expected to grow by two-thirds in the period to 2040, particularly the electricity demand due to a rising middle class population. Electro mobility does not gain much of a foothold in the projects. These are some of the findings of the Energy Outlook 2017.
URL


Admin:
No