China's Belt and Road Initiative: from perceptions to realities in Indonesia's coal power sector

This paper contributes to the debate on the sustainability of the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) by analyzing Chinese investments in Indonesia's coal power sector. Insofar, scholarship on the BRI examined the role of Chinese companies “going out,” neglecting host countries' agency in shapi...

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Main Author: Angela Tritto
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2021-03-01
Series:Energy Strategy Reviews
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211467X21000109
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spelling doaj-10b846f4df6942f69a8e918db8cb5aa52021-03-13T04:22:35ZengElsevierEnergy Strategy Reviews2211-467X2021-03-0134100624China's Belt and Road Initiative: from perceptions to realities in Indonesia's coal power sectorAngela Tritto0The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, Institute of Emerging Market Studies, Division of Social Science, Room 2026, IAS Lo Ka Chung Building, HKUST, Clearwater Bay, Kowloon, Hong Kong Special Administrative RegionThis paper contributes to the debate on the sustainability of the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) by analyzing Chinese investments in Indonesia's coal power sector. Insofar, scholarship on the BRI examined the role of Chinese companies “going out,” neglecting host countries' agency in shaping this initiative. This study analyses this important yet often overlooked dimension through the lens of local stakeholders. Fifteen in-depth interviews provide key insights into themes that are explored using a novel database. Results show a sharp increase in the Chinese-led financing, construction, and investments in Indonesia's coal power plants. While large State-owned enterprises spearheaded this increase, the BRI is also generating an impetus of private investments in new “instrumental” coal power plants that serve industrial parks, owned by non-energy companies. After the Paris Agreement, only Chinese, Japanese, and Malaysian institutions continued to finance coal power plants in Indonesia. However, unlike other foreign investors, Chinese companies are bringing mostly subcritical (low-end) technology, and their operations have been associated with the use of illegal labour. Overall, results show how China's export of industrial capacity and financing through the BRI is met by Indonesia's developmental attitude towards using coal and foreign investments to prioritize its economy growth over environmental and social sustainability.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211467X21000109ChinaBelt and road initiativeIndonesiaCoal power plantsSustainable developmentMixed methods research
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Angela Tritto
spellingShingle Angela Tritto
China's Belt and Road Initiative: from perceptions to realities in Indonesia's coal power sector
Energy Strategy Reviews
China
Belt and road initiative
Indonesia
Coal power plants
Sustainable development
Mixed methods research
author_facet Angela Tritto
author_sort Angela Tritto
title China's Belt and Road Initiative: from perceptions to realities in Indonesia's coal power sector
title_short China's Belt and Road Initiative: from perceptions to realities in Indonesia's coal power sector
title_full China's Belt and Road Initiative: from perceptions to realities in Indonesia's coal power sector
title_fullStr China's Belt and Road Initiative: from perceptions to realities in Indonesia's coal power sector
title_full_unstemmed China's Belt and Road Initiative: from perceptions to realities in Indonesia's coal power sector
title_sort china's belt and road initiative: from perceptions to realities in indonesia's coal power sector
publisher Elsevier
series Energy Strategy Reviews
issn 2211-467X
publishDate 2021-03-01
description This paper contributes to the debate on the sustainability of the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) by analyzing Chinese investments in Indonesia's coal power sector. Insofar, scholarship on the BRI examined the role of Chinese companies “going out,” neglecting host countries' agency in shaping this initiative. This study analyses this important yet often overlooked dimension through the lens of local stakeholders. Fifteen in-depth interviews provide key insights into themes that are explored using a novel database. Results show a sharp increase in the Chinese-led financing, construction, and investments in Indonesia's coal power plants. While large State-owned enterprises spearheaded this increase, the BRI is also generating an impetus of private investments in new “instrumental” coal power plants that serve industrial parks, owned by non-energy companies. After the Paris Agreement, only Chinese, Japanese, and Malaysian institutions continued to finance coal power plants in Indonesia. However, unlike other foreign investors, Chinese companies are bringing mostly subcritical (low-end) technology, and their operations have been associated with the use of illegal labour. Overall, results show how China's export of industrial capacity and financing through the BRI is met by Indonesia's developmental attitude towards using coal and foreign investments to prioritize its economy growth over environmental and social sustainability.
topic China
Belt and road initiative
Indonesia
Coal power plants
Sustainable development
Mixed methods research
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211467X21000109
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