ERIA Research Project Report, 2024-06
Authors
- Pages
- 139
- Published in
- Indonesia
Table of Contents
- Table of Contents 6
- List of Figures 7
- Chapter 1 16
- Introduction 16
- 1. APEC Energy Resiliency Principle 20
- 1.1. Introduction 20
- 1.2. Background and Purpose of the APEC Energy Resiliency Principle 21
- 1.2.1. International efforts against natural disasters 21
- 1.2.2. APEC energy resiliency principle 21
- 1.2.3. Definition of energy resiliency 22
- 1.2.4. The principle on the role of financial institutions and energy resiliency indicators 24
- 1.2.5. Importance of multi-stakeholder knowledge sharing 25
- 2. APEC’s Future Perspectives of Energy Resiliency Enhancement 25
- 2.1. APEC Will Expand Its Activities to Enhance Energy Resiliency in the APEC Region 25
- 2.2. APEC Energy Resiliency Guidelines10F 27
- 2.2.1. Introduction 27
- 2.2.2. Scope of the guidelines 27
- 2.2.3. Future action 28
- 2.2.4. Energy resiliency enhancement project in 2023 29
- 2.3. Development of ISO 22366: Security and Resilience – Energy Resilience – Framework and Principles13F 29
- Chapter 3 33
- Review of Consideration for Building Indicators Relating Energy Resilience Enhancement 33
- 1. Overview 33
- 2. RAND Corporation’s Study17F 34
- 3. Argonne National Laboratory’s Study19F 35
- 4. Sandia National Laboratory’s Study20F 38
- 5. Consideration for Development of ERS in Asian Countries 41
- 5.1. Philippines 41
- 5.2. Thailand 43
- 5.3. Indonesia 46
- Chapter 4 48
- Prototype of a Quantitative Energy Resilience Scoring Tool and the Trial Results 48
- 1. The Need for Improved Trial Energy Resilience Scoring 48
- 2. Detail of the Prototype of the Energy Resilience Score System 49
- 2.1. Concept of an Energy Resilience Score (ERS) 49
- 2.2. Overview of the ERS 51
- 2.3. Approach to calculating the ERS 52
- 2.4. Detailed Explanation of the Three Evaluations 54
- 2.4.1. General 54
- 2.4.2. Region 54
- 2.4.3. Energy supplier 55
- 2.4.4. Energy consumers 55
- 3. Trial Analysis with Prototype ERS system 56
- 3.1. Target Consumer (Facility) 56
- 3.2. Current Status of Disaster Risk in the Assessed Areas 59
- 3.3. Survey of the Supply Side 63
- 3.4. Survey of the Consumer Side 69
- 3.5. Results of the Evaluation 71
- Chapter 5 75
- Discussions at the Workshops 75
- 1. General 75
- 2. Current Status of Disaster Risk in the Three Countries 75
- 2.1. Japan 75
- 2.2. Thailand 76
- 2.3. Indonesia 77
- 3. Major Discussions at the Workshop Meetings 78
- 3.1. Workshop in Japan 78
- 3.2. Workshop in Thailand 81
- 3.3. Workshop in Indonesia 83
- Chapter 6 89
- Challenges to be Addressed 89
- 1. General 89
- 2. Refinement of Scoring 89
- 3. Fine-tuning According to Countries and Regions 89
- 3.1. Regional Scores (Climate Scores) 89
- 3.2. Regional Scores (Future Perspective) 90
- 4. Potential for Utilisation in the Private Sector 90
- Chapter 7 91
- Expected Future Work Regarding the ERS 91
- 1. Expectations for the ERS 91
- 2. Expected Future Work Related to the ERS System 92
- 2.1. Improving the Usability of the ERS Evaluation System 92
- 2.2. Promote Collaboration of Data Collection for ERS Evaluation 94
- 2.3. Accumulation of scoring data 94
- 2.4. Standardisation of Reliable and Comparable Data 95
- Appendix 1 97
- Contents of the APEC Energy Resiliency Principle and Guidance30F 97
- Appendix 2 103
- Workshop Agenda 103
- Appendix 3 109
- Workshop Participants List 109
- Appendix 4 115
- Presentation Material at the Workshops 115