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GENERATION REPORT: HYDROPOWER China-concentrated energy capacity drives AsiaPacific as hydropower ‘powerhouse’
The Asia-Pacific (APAC) region is the front-runner in deploying hydropower which could play a crucial role in replacing the void to be left by coal amidst the energy transition. Although the region is the “powerhouse” for hydropower, the majority of installations are mostly located in China. The total installed capacity of hydropower globally in 2021 is 1,360 gigawatts (GW), of which 391 GW are in China, according to the International Hydropower Association’s 2022 Hydropower Status Report. By region, 523 GW are in East Asia and Pacific, followed by Europe (255 GW), North and Central South America (205 GW), South America (177 GW), South and Central Asia (162 GW), and Africa (38 GW).
In 2021 alone, hydropower including pumped storage saw 26 GW of capacity additions, of which around 21.9 GW is from East Asia and the Pacific. Out of the new installations in the region, 20.8 GW are accounted for by China.
“With rapidly growing economies, continued population growth in many countries, and an awareness of the impacts of climate change that will increase the pressure to remove coal, the region is likely to remain a new hydropower hotspot for the foreseeable future,” the IHA report read.
According to the report, the untapped potential in the region, along with South and Central Asia, is the highest in the world. Developed sustainably it can help to relieve stresses on electricity grids as more solar is deployed, potentially with less significant land-use impacts.
‘Aggressive’ China
The long-term development plan for hydropower in China is still “quite aggressive,” considering that most of the best hydropower resources in the country have already been built, said David Fishman, senior manager at The Lantau Group, told Asian Power. He cited Sichuan Province—a prominent “hydropower powerhouse” in the country—which boasts numerous dams located upstream of the Yangtze River. Ambitious plans are still underway to increase the capacity by approximately 20 gigawatts (GW) and to add another 12 GW even further upstream, extending all the way to the Tibetan Plateau.
According to the IHA, China’s hydropower capacity reached 395.6 GW by end-2021 and it added nearly 2 GW of new capacity in the first two months of 2022.
The 16 GW Baihetan hydropower station, the second largest in the world, also came online in July 2021, generating 62,000 gigawatt-hours of electricity annually. Pumped storage hydropower development is also not out of the picture as the country’s National Energy Administration released the mid-term and long-term plan for the sector from 2021 to 2035 in September 2021. Under the plan, pumped storage hydropower is expected to reach at least 62 GW in 2025, and 120 GW in 2030 or around 75% of the current capacity.
China also leads in the pumped storage hydropower capacity, comprising 36 GW of the 161.6 GW total, followed by Japan with 27.5 GW, and the US with 22 GW.
The country’s target of carbon peaking by 2030 and carbon neutrality by 2060, is driving the installation of hydropower in the country, said Fishman.
“They really don’t have that much time to swing the entire country around from where it is right now, which is heavily reliant on thermal coal, specifically, to something that is low-carbon,” he told. “You don’t have many options that are also low carbon, you have pretty much only hydropower and nuclear.”
Fishman said China is building nuclear capacity on its coasts, whilst hydropower is being built in the inland regions. Hydropower has to be matched with variable generation sources like wind and solar. “That is the only way that you can bring in lots of wind and solar into your grid. At the same time, to have stability, you need to have a dispatchable firm source to work with, and hydropower can do that in China,” he added.
Facing headwinds
Despite the hydropower’s potential in the region excluding the Middle East, hydropower is still expected to face “significant headwinds” due to environmental and social opposition, according to a Fitch Solutions report by David Thoo, Power and Renewables analyst. Constructing dams on rivers could negatively affect the ecology and livelihood of the people in the area, Thoo said, citing the opposition by environmentalists and local communities against additional damming of the Mekong river basin. There are 31 gigawatts of hydropower projects in pre-construction and construction states along the Mekong river across 57 projects, 41 of which are in Laos, and the rest are located in Cambodia, Myanmar, and Vietnam.
The Mekong river basin is the largest inland fishery, accounting for 25% of the global freshwater fishing, which around 60 million people from markets in the region depend for livelihood.
“We remain apprehensive about the strong growth of hydropower generation capacity in the Southeast Asia region, as opposition remains strong, especially after flaws were found in environmental impact assessments (EIAs),” the report read.
Thoo added in the report that financing of hydropower projects is also limited because of the high capital needed and long construction times before it can generate and sell electricity. Banks are also reserved in financing such projects as this could affect their reputation due to strong international opposition.
Fishman said that building hydropower is “extremely capital-intensive” because you will take into account not only the cost to build the generation infrastructure but also the need to allocate funds for local people that could be displaced.
Slowed growth
The capacity and generation expansion of hydropower is expected to be limited from 2021 to 2031 because of the competition with other renewable sectors such as solar