Madeleine Varkay - Developing EE Finance For Indonesia

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Developing Energy Efficiency Finance for Indonesias Banking Sector

23 June 2011 Madeleine Varkay

Senior Private Sector Development Specialist Financial Sector, Public Management and Trade Division Southeast Asia Regional Department Asian Development Bank

Presentation Outline
Energy Efficiency Potential
Case Study: Preparing Energy Efficiency Financing in Indonesia

Energy Efficiency Solutions


SUPPLY-SIDE
Generation: Plant rehabilitation, supercritical boilers, fuel switching, combined heat & power (CHP), integrated gasified combined cycle (IGCC), improved O&M Transmission & Distribution: Improved transformers, HV lines, insulated conductors, capacitors, improved metering, substation rehab, gas compression and decompression, system optimization

END-USE
Industrial: Energy audits, EE financing, ESCOs, boilers, chillers, CHP, fuel switching, waste heat recovery, industrial motors/drive systems, process equipment Commercial: Building codes, building retrofits, envelop measures (i.e. insulation, windows), lighting, pumping, space/water heating/cooling Residential: Building codes, appliance standards, lighting, labeling/consumer education, improved cook stoves, solar water heaters Municipal: Street lighting & other public lighting, traffic signals, water pumping (supply and wastewater), wasteto-energy

District Heating: Boiler rehabilitation, pre-insulated piping, compensators, pumps, heat exchangers
Transport: Alternative fuel buses, mass transit systems

Agriculture: Irrigation pumping/drip irrigation, EE agricultural processing equipment


Transport: Fuel-efficiency standards, mass transit, efficient vehicle technologies Utility Load Management: Time-of-use metering, demand charges, direct load control, demand response programs

Source: ADB and World Bank

Indonesias $4 Billion EE Investment Potential


Investment Potential and Type
Commercial Buildings $1 billion for electrical system retrofits, system efficiency improvements, poly-generation and waste heat recovery $3 billion for electrical system retrofits

Potential Annual Savings


$254 million/yr in avoided electricity and fuel costs

Industrial Facilities

$1.9 billion for system efficiency improvements, polygeneration and waste heat recovery
Source: ADB estimates

$641 million/year in avoided electricity and fuel costs

ISO 50001, the new global energy efficiency and energy management standard, was released on June 20 2011. The new international, voluntary standard, developed by a project committee of 45 partnering countries from the International Organization for Standardization (ISO), provides organizations with a framework for continuous energy performance improvements. The framework will encourage adoption of best practices that reduce the energy use of existing equipment and facilities, require the use of energy performance data to target cost-effective upgrades, and emphasize the design and installation of highly efficient energy systems and equipment. By increasing their operational efficiency, organizations that adopt the ISO 50001 standard will save money by saving energy.

Developing Energy Efficiency lending to Indonesian exporters, as per market demand


Target customer criteria
Exporters

Rationale
Focuses on companies with strongest motivation to participate -increasingly, European and US importers (e.g. Walmart) require carbon footprint data from all their suppliers Avoids borrowers taking on currency risk o Loans will be US$ denominated o Exporters have US$ revenues

Energy efficiency loan size in the range Upper limit: US$5mn1

Ensures loans are targeted at those exporters without ready access to other funding sources for larger loans, vendor financing is often available at competitive rates (e.g. large palm oil processor has equipment financing from WestLB at libor +250bp with 6 to 8 years tenor) Avoids projects which are too large for a distributing bank to process easily
Helps demonstrate impact if the loans are too small, their impact will be less evident Ensures project payback is significant to the borrower, thus motivating the borrower to prioritize the project Targets customers with most to gain from improved energy efficiency

Lower limit US$200,000 (this implies Mid-Market corporations) Energy intensive Uses electricity as primary energy source (as opposed to LNG or other forms of cheaper power)
Note: 1)

upper limit subject to review once lending starts

We have started assessing how Indonesias 10 largest export sectors fit with the target customer criteria2
Indonesian exports
Exports, largest sectors, US$ bn (Jan to Mar 2010; total for
sectors shown = US$ 24.0bn, out of total exports of US$35.4bn)1

Fit with target customer criteria2


Highly concentrated, so projects likely large (& outside range)

Further analysis for TA funded work

Oil & gas Minerals (non oil and gas) Animal or vegetable fats and oils Electrical machinery & electronics Ores
2.7 2.3 2.0 2.0 1.1 1.0 0.9 0.9 4.7

6.5

Review industry structure to determine scope of EE among both direct exporters, and their supply chain (indirect exporters) Assess demand for EE lending, through interviewing industry associations, reviewing available documents and possibly interviewing a sample of customers

Tend to be Japanese, Korean and Taiwanese MNCs As for oil, gas and minerals

Rubber, rubber articles


Boilers, mechanical applicances Paper and paper products Copper and copper products Garments

Competitive intensity increasing, forcing cost cuts = weak fit

= strong fit with Source: 1) Badan Pusat Statistik (Indonesian Central Government statistics department) Total exports 2010: USD 158 bn. target customer Note 2)Target criteria are: exporters, loan size in range US$200k to US$5mn, intensive use of electricity criteria

3 of these rubber, paper and garments have potential EE savings in the range $70mn to $150mn / year
Exports, largest sectors, US$ bn (Jan to Mar
2010; total for sectors shown = US$ 24.0bn, out of total exports of US$35.4bn)1

Electricity costs as a % of total costs2


6.5

Estimated electricity usage US$mn3 per year

3 export sectors (rubber, paper and garments) have combined electricity costs of around US$700 mn per year Assuming EE savings in the range of 10% to 20%, implies potential savings of US$70 to $150mn/ year, across these 3 sectors alone

Oil & gas Minerals (non oil and gas) Animal or vegetable fats and oils Electrical machinery & electronics Ores Rubber, rubber articles Boilers, mechanical applicances Paper and paper products Copper and copper products
2.7 2.3 2.0 2.0 1.1 1.0 0.9 0.9 4.7

4.1%

7.6%

Garments
Source: 1) 2) 3)

8.0%
300

0 100 200 Badan Pusat Statistik (Indonesian Central Government statistics department) ADB Estimates based on industry interviews; excludes non-electricity costs Calculated from other two columns, assuming a profit margin of 20%; e.g.: Rubber accounted for US$2bn in exports over Q1 2010, equivalent to US$8bn a year. Assuming 20% profit margin gives estimated annual costs of US$6.4bn. The electricity costs are 4.1% of this or $262 mn

These overall demand figures are based on a range of projects with widely varying payback periods
Example: EE demand, sample of 10 Indonesian textile companies
Return Payback (years)1
0 to 2

IRR equiv
>50%

Investment required (Total = US$4.6 mn)

# of projects in sample (Total = 19)


6

Examples of projects

High efficiency motors/ VSD Heat loss reduction Lighting

2 to 4

24.9% - 50% 16.3% 24.9% 11.7% 16.3% 8.8% 11.7%

Chiller optimization Furnace and boiler improvements Transformer replacement


Controlling leaks in cooling and steam systems Process improvements Thermal efficiency improvements Larger process improvements Boiler replacement Cogeneration CHP (Combined Heat and Power) Building envelope improvements, insulation

4 to 6

6 to 8

8 to 10

Above 10 Source: Note: 1) 2)

<8.8%

EMI audits of 19 projects over 10 small to mid size companies in the textile sector Data on this slide is inconsistent with previous slide (e.g. Investment per company is US$460k here vs 1.2mn on previous page) , this is because this slide omits some large items with long payback, since audits focused on smaller companies In calculating the payback period we assumed : a) zero cost of funds; b) projects impacting the production process would be implemented during downtime for routine maintenance, and thus no additional costs from lost production ; c) energy costs (and thus benefits) remain constant over payback period

The market demand can be divided into two categories which should be approached differently
Category Commercially viable (focus of Phase I)
Projects meeting commercial borrower acceptance criteria (assumed at payback < 5 years)1

Large external benefits, but requiring subsidy to be commercially viable (excluded from Phase I)
Projects rejected under borrower acceptance criteria But, with substantial external benefits, including: o Reduce GHG emissions significantly o Help maintain export competitiveness, through ensuring ISO 50001 compliance

Description

Market size (total estimated investments, US$mn) Average project investment (US$mn) Proposed approach

307 846
Support initially, to educate market, and demonstrate some successes o Fund free/ discounted energy audits to identify projects o Demonstrate project viability through providing finance at market prices

871

Note:

1)

Longer term, once concepts well established, withdraw support A hurdle payback period of 5 years is based on a small number of industry interviews. During Phase I, we would conduct a survey to confirm or adjust this.

Quantify subsidies required to make these projects commercially viable to Indonesian exporters Subsidize initial purchase and installation of equipment Work with suppliers of equipment to reduce costs o Consolidate purchases from many buyers to obtain bulk discounts o Over time build up volumes to allow scale economies to reduce costs As equipment costs reduce, phase out subsidies

We believe our demand estimates are conservative, and will increase as Indonesia raises electricity prices
Indonesian industrial electricity prices are low by world standards
Industrial electricity prices, selected countries, US cents/ KWH
Japan

and are expected to increase significantly over the next few months

Singapore
UK France Brazil Average OECD Germany Thailand Korea Taiwan USA Canada Australia Indonesia Russia 0 Source: 5 10 15 20

The Indonesian Ministry of Energy and Minerals introduced regulation in 2010, to raise industrial electricity prices by an average of 18%

International Energy Agency; other published sources; prices for latest year available, mostly 2009

10

Primary Energy Consumption Projection with EE Scenario

Saving 2.2 million BOE or 44% reduction

Source: DGEEU, 2008

Thank you.
[email protected]
(632) 632-4030

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