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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor Principal: Yogisworo, Danang
Formato: Recurso digital
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Publicado: Zenodo 2025
Acceso en liña:https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.17636403
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Table of Contents:
  • <p><span lang="EN-US">Indonesia’s presidentially mandated <em>“1 MW per Village”</em> initiative constitutes one of the most ambitious decentralized solar programs in the Global South, targeting the deployment of <strong>80–100 GW</strong> of solar capacity and approximately <strong>320 GWh</strong> of energy storage across <strong>80,000 villages</strong>. While the program promises substantial contributions to the clean energy transition, rural electrification, and national energy sovereignty, it simultaneously confronts a significant implementation gap, given Indonesia’s current solar deployment of only <strong>538 MWp</strong>. To interrogate this challenge, the study employs a multi-stage methodological framework adapted from conceptual note - algorithm for compiling and aggregating responses across multiple AI platforms. The approach involves parallel generation of platform-specific outputs, structured compilation, guided aggregation, and iterative refinement through a dynamic switching mechanism until content convergence is achieved, thereby ensuring analytical coherence and robustness. Using this methodology, the study systematically evaluates four core risk clusters—financial, logistical, industrial, and regulatory—that collectively shape the program’s feasibility. The findings highlight critical barriers, including high capital expenditure requirements, extensive land and infrastructure needs, limited domestic manufacturing and skilled labor capacity, and unresolved policy uncertainty stemming from the unfinished Presidential Regulation. To address these challenges, the paper proposes a multi-dimensional de-risking strategy encompassing bankable financing mechanisms, coordinated land-use planning, human-capital development, localized operations and maintenance governance, and regulatory acceleration. Overall, the study concludes that the initiative can achieve operational viability and long-term sustainability only through decisive regulatory action and coordinated cross-sectoral implementation, offering a structured pathway for policymakers and investors to translate this national mandate into a scalable model for energy transition.</span></p>