The country aims for net-zero carbon emissions by 2050, as outlined in its Power Development Plan 8 (PDP8).

VIETNAM has dramatically increased its wind and solar targets as it looks to up its en­ergy production by 2030 to meet soaring demand, according to a revised version of its national power plan.

The Southeast Asian coun­try has committed to reaching net-zero carbon emissions by 2050 and the latest edition of its Power Development Plan 8 (PDP8), as it is known, maps out how it will reach those goals.

The manufacturing pow­erhouse has been heavily reli­ant on coal to meet its rapidly expanding energy needs. But now it wants to “strongly devel­op renewable energy sources”, according to the plan, which was published Wednesday on the government’s news portal.

With targets set at 73 gi­gawatts (GW) for solar and 38 GW for onshore wind energy by 2030 — and a significant in­crease to 296 GW and 230 GW by 2050 — the plan looks “really ambitious”, said Andri Praset­iyo, senior researcher at Senik Centre Asia. The 2023 version of the PDP8 aimed for 12.8 GW for solar and 21 GW for wind by the end of the decade.

“I think this sends a clear message, Vietnam is positioning itself to maintain leadership in Southeast Asia’s clean energy transition, (even) taking a more prominent role in the region,” he told AFP. — AFP

#The Global New Light of Myanmar