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View all search resultsPower plant companies are knee-deep in political influencing and lobbying with little to no transparency, resulting in entrenched coal interests in Indonesia’s energy agenda amid a push for renewables, a recent report by Transparency International Indonesia (TII) has suggested.
State-run Korea Electric Power Corporation (KEPCO) has confirmed it will partner Indonesia to add two more 1,000 megawatt units to the complex in Suralaya, which residents fear will further increase water and air pollution in the area.
Activists have staged a protest in front of the South Korean Embassy in Jakarta over the development of new power plants that they say contradict South Korea's Green New Deal – a set of goals for the country to reach net-zero emissions by 2050.
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