Published on 24/11/2014
Egat says more coal-fired power plants needed
The Electricity Generating Authority of Thailand (Egat) has confirmed Thailand will have to build more coal-fired power plants to meet its energy needs since future supplies of natural gas are uncertain and renewable energy is expensive. Wiwat Chancherngpanich, Egat's assistant governor for power plant construction, said Thailand has no choice other than coal if it wants to strengthen energy production at a fair price because natural gas supplies are very uncertain since Myanmar, the country's main supplier, has a policy to reserve most natural gas for domestic use. Renewable energy such as hydroelectric power plants and solar cells also have unstable production capacities, are not commercially viable on an industrial scale, and involve high investment costs, he said. At present, 68% of Thailand's electricity is produced from natural gas, 9% from coal power plants and the rest from other fossil fuels and renewable energy. The country's energy consumption also goes up 3% every year and it is estimated it will increase from 32,395 megawatts in 2011 to 70,685 megawatts in 2030. The Egat's third revised Power Development Plan (PDP) for 2012-2030 aims to reduce natural gas consumption to 58% by the end of 2030, while increasing the use of renewable energy to 25% by the end of the plan. Hydropower dams are to produce 5,803.9 megawatts and solar cell farms 3,802.1 megawatts by the same year. "Although we have attempted to increase renewable energy due to environmental concerns, we do need to accept the fact that the power output is not stable. We want to increase use of more stable sources of energy to prevent an energy crisis. There is nothing better than coal as the current choice," Mr Wiwat said.