Development of renewable energy in Malaysia strategic initiatives for carbon reduction in the power generation sector

Malaysia introduced renewable energy as the 5th fuel strategy in the energy-mix under the National Energy Policy in 2001. A target was set at 500 MW grid-connected power generations by 2005 from renewable energy sources. The small renewable energy power program (SREP) was launched at the same time w...

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Main Author: Shamsuddin A.H.
Other Authors: 35779071900
Format: Conference paper
Published: Elsevier Ltd 2023
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spelling my.uniten.dspace-303462023-12-29T15:46:56Z Development of renewable energy in Malaysia strategic initiatives for carbon reduction in the power generation sector Shamsuddin A.H. 35779071900 National energy policy Renewable electricity Renewable resources Malaysia introduced renewable energy as the 5th fuel strategy in the energy-mix under the National Energy Policy in 2001. A target was set at 500 MW grid-connected power generations by 2005 from renewable energy sources. The small renewable energy power program (SREP) was launched at the same time with fiscal incentives to support this initiative. Malaysia has huge potential renewable energy resources in the form of biomass, solar and hydro. However, the implementation of SREP was not up to expectation due to several barriers and challenges faced by the authorities and developers, and the target was revised in 2006 to 350 MW by 2010. At the COP15 in Copenhagen, Malaysia pledged a voluntary reduction of up to 40% in terms of emissions intensity of GDP by the year 2020 compared to 2005 levels. With this commitment the Renewable Energy Act (RE Act 2010) was enacted in 2011 with provision of Feed-in Tariff, providing more attractive incentives to spur the implementation of grid-connected power generation from renewable energy resources. With the new RE Act2010, the target is revised to 985 MW by 2015, 2,080 MW (2020) and to 21,000 MW in 2050. This paper describes the development of renewable energy policy framework, strategies and initiatives for renewable energy implementation in Malaysia, in an effort to reduce carbon emissions as pledged at the COP15. This paper also provides examples of renewable power generation currently implemented and the on-going research and development activities to enhance the exploitation of renewable energy resources in Malaysia. � 2012 The Authors. Final 2023-12-29T07:46:56Z 2023-12-29T07:46:56Z 2012 Conference paper 10.1016/j.proeng.2012.10.150 2-s2.0-84875754096 https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84875754096&doi=10.1016%2fj.proeng.2012.10.150&partnerID=40&md5=7ee39bab7d209877de1e74ab3563b501 https://irepository.uniten.edu.my/handle/123456789/30346 49 384 391 All Open Access; Gold Open Access Elsevier Ltd Scopus
institution Universiti Tenaga Nasional
building UNITEN Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Tenaga Nasional
content_source UNITEN Institutional Repository
url_provider http://dspace.uniten.edu.my/
topic National energy policy
Renewable electricity
Renewable resources
spellingShingle National energy policy
Renewable electricity
Renewable resources
Shamsuddin A.H.
Development of renewable energy in Malaysia strategic initiatives for carbon reduction in the power generation sector
description Malaysia introduced renewable energy as the 5th fuel strategy in the energy-mix under the National Energy Policy in 2001. A target was set at 500 MW grid-connected power generations by 2005 from renewable energy sources. The small renewable energy power program (SREP) was launched at the same time with fiscal incentives to support this initiative. Malaysia has huge potential renewable energy resources in the form of biomass, solar and hydro. However, the implementation of SREP was not up to expectation due to several barriers and challenges faced by the authorities and developers, and the target was revised in 2006 to 350 MW by 2010. At the COP15 in Copenhagen, Malaysia pledged a voluntary reduction of up to 40% in terms of emissions intensity of GDP by the year 2020 compared to 2005 levels. With this commitment the Renewable Energy Act (RE Act 2010) was enacted in 2011 with provision of Feed-in Tariff, providing more attractive incentives to spur the implementation of grid-connected power generation from renewable energy resources. With the new RE Act2010, the target is revised to 985 MW by 2015, 2,080 MW (2020) and to 21,000 MW in 2050. This paper describes the development of renewable energy policy framework, strategies and initiatives for renewable energy implementation in Malaysia, in an effort to reduce carbon emissions as pledged at the COP15. This paper also provides examples of renewable power generation currently implemented and the on-going research and development activities to enhance the exploitation of renewable energy resources in Malaysia. � 2012 The Authors.
author2 35779071900
author_facet 35779071900
Shamsuddin A.H.
format Conference paper
author Shamsuddin A.H.
author_sort Shamsuddin A.H.
title Development of renewable energy in Malaysia strategic initiatives for carbon reduction in the power generation sector
title_short Development of renewable energy in Malaysia strategic initiatives for carbon reduction in the power generation sector
title_full Development of renewable energy in Malaysia strategic initiatives for carbon reduction in the power generation sector
title_fullStr Development of renewable energy in Malaysia strategic initiatives for carbon reduction in the power generation sector
title_full_unstemmed Development of renewable energy in Malaysia strategic initiatives for carbon reduction in the power generation sector
title_sort development of renewable energy in malaysia strategic initiatives for carbon reduction in the power generation sector
publisher Elsevier Ltd
publishDate 2023
_version_ 1806427430288621568
score 13.214268