Abstract

Australia is an energy net self-sufficient country rich in energy resources, from fossil-based to renewable energy. Australia, a huge continent with low population density, has witnessed impressive reduction in energy consumption in various sectors of activity in recent years. Currently, coal and natural gas are two of Australia’s major export earners, yet its abundant renewable energy resources such as solar, wind, and tidal, are still underutilized. The majority of Asian countries, on the other hand, are in the middle of economic expansion, with increasing energy consumption and lack of energy resources or lack of energy exploration capability becoming a serious challenge. Electricity interconnection linking two or more independent grids within a country or at cross-border or regional levels has found its way into electricity markets worldwide. This concept allows for electricity exchanges that lead to optimized use and sharing of electricity generated from different sources. The interconnection also enables the long distance exploitation of renewable energy which would otherwise be physically impossible. ASEAN (Association of Southeast Asian Nations) and other regional groupings in Asia have initiated a number of interconnections to gain economic benefits. Asian’s hunger for energy for its economic development, climate change that has become a global and urgent issue to be solved, and Australia’s abundant renewable energy resources have all prompted increasing interest in a super-grid interconnection linking Australia to Asian grids, the Australian–Asian (Power) Grid (AAG). This paper overviews the existing grid interconnections as well as current initiatives at domestic, sub-regional, and regional levels worldwide, with a particular focus on Asia. The paper concludes with a critical appraisal on the benefits, potential, challenges and issues to be encountered by the AAG initiative.

Highlights

  • Energy plays a central role in human development and improved quality of life

  • This paper presents a critical appraisal of the prospect for an Australian–Asian electricity super grid—an inter-continental connection of electrical power grids between Australia and Asia

  • This Section is dedicated to the ASEAN Power Grid (APG) with a rather detailed treatment for an obvious reason: the likelihood of an Asian—Australian Grid is very much intertwined with the successful realization of the APG

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Summary

A Critical Appraisal

Edward Halawa 1,2, *, Geoffrey James 3 , Xunpeng (Roc) Shi 4,5 and Rabindra Nepal 8. Barbara Hardy Institute, School of Engineering, University of South Australia, Mawson Lakes, SA 5095, Australia. Energy Studies Institute, National University of Singapore, Singapore 119077, Singapore. The School of Geography, Politics and Sociology, Newcastle University, Newcastle upon Tyne NE1 7RU, UK. Received: 17 October 2017; Accepted: 11 January 2018; Published: 15 January 2018

Introduction
Asian Countries Energy Indicators—An Overview
The Global Power Grid “Dream”
Basslink
Mainland French—Italian Mainland Interconnections
Regional Interconnections
GW of generation capacity
Icelink
The EuroAsia Interconnector
The ASEAN Power Grid
ASEAN Electricity Generation and Generation Capacity
ASEAN Resources Advantages
ASEAN Vision 2020 for Energy Interconnections
The Case
Benefits
Existing Scenarios
A Brief History of the Australia–ASEAN Engagement
Findings
Australian Front
Conclusions

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