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Coal-reliant Indonesia receives $20 billion to boost green energy

In Indonesia’s region of East Kalimantan, the country’s dependence on coal is on full display.

Driving on the region’s toll road, passersby can watch excavators digging coal from shallow pits as trucks filled with the carbon-rich rocks rush by. Under a bridge in Samarinda, the region’s capital, hundreds of mammoth, jet-black mountains of coal sit in barges being pulled along the waterway, headed to plants across Indonesia or other countries.

They’re sights that Indonesia has pledged to phase out – or at least drastically reduce – by agreeing to some five schemes with international stakeholders, including the largest-signed $20 billion Just Energy Transition Partnership deal. While the deals aim to turn one of the largest coal-producing countries toward its vast greener energy sources, experts warn that financial, policy, infrastructure, and other challenges need to be overcome.

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