The Path to 100% Renewable Energy in Indonesia-IMW

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In Short : Within the next ten years, Indonesia can achieve 100% renewable energy, a daring acceleration of global energy transition timelines, according to President Prabowo Subianto. This objective is rooted in a larger movement toward economic resilience, energy self-reliance, and a comprehensive transition away from fossil fuels and toward clean energy.

Ambitious Objectives in the Face of Odds
Currently, coal-fired power accounts for more than 66% of Indonesia’s electricity generation, with renewables making up less than 15% of capacity. Prabowo’s vision calls for eliminating this significant reliance on fossil fuels and placing the nation’s untapped renewable resources—hydropower, geothermal, wind, and solar—at the center of its energy roadmap.

According to reports, Indonesia would require an estimated US$154 billion in investments for grid modernization, storage solutions, and renewable infrastructure in order to realize this vision.

Forecasted Routes to Solar-Powered Development
Indonesia has a lot of potential for solar deployment because of its abundant equatorial sunlight, which averages 4.8 kWh/m² and can reach over 5.6 in southern regions. Utilizing solar panels and hybrid systems (such as solar system designs that incorporate storage or microgrids) strategically could help electrify low-income households, decarbonize transportation, and power rural communities.

Building such infrastructure would be in line with international clean investment trends and could increase the share price of Indonesia’s solar industry as local production and deployment grow.

Strategic Obstacles and Sustainable Development
Prabowo’s goal goes beyond technology; it’s an institutional and policy issue. Independent producers are hampered and clean energy financing is disrupted by the state-led monopoly (through PLN), fossil fuel subsidies, and the lack of a strong wholesale electricity market.

Deployment delays and funding gaps persist despite the framework provided by international assistance such as the Just Energy Transition Partnership (JETP), which has pledged US$20 billion.

The Bottom Line
The bold, forward-thinking goal of clean energy by 2035 is set by President Prabowo’s statement. Indonesia may become Southeast Asia’s renewable energy corridor with the support of private sector involvement, local solar infrastructure development, and policy changes. Reaching this goal would represent a significant shift away from non-renewable resources and toward sustainable development at the national level.