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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsMexico Building Latin America’s Largest Solar Farm To Replace Old, Dirty Oil-Power Plant
Mexico Building Latin Americas Largest Solar Farm To Replace Old, Dirty Oil-Power Plant
By Ari Phillips
Last week President Obama and Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper visited Mexico for whats traditionally called the Three Amigos meeting. In the daylong rendezvous, energy issues were slated to play a major role, with Obama and Harper jockeying for room when it comes to the impending decision on the controversial Keystone XL pipeline that would bring dirty crude oil down from Canada to refineries on the Gulf Coast.
However, Mexico also has some major energy changes in the pipeline, and after decades of state-run oil company PEMEX having sole purview over fossil fuel extraction, international investment and companies will now be let into the mix after recent constitutional reforms. This will increase oil flows from Americas southern neighbor into those same Gulf refineries as Keystone XL might. At the same time renewable energy has started to take off in Mexico, with construction of the biggest solar power plant in Latin America, Aura Solar I a 30-megawatt solar farm in La Paz, Mexico the latest signal.
If Mexican President Enrique Peña Nietos recent summit with North American leaders is an indication of the significance of the trios relationship, then his expected upcoming visit to the Aura I solar farm can be seen as a benchmark on the countrys path to a more renewable future. Mexico is poised to be Latin Americas solar hotbed according to Greentech Media, with the solar markets installed base expected to quadruple from 60 megawatts to 240 megawatts by the end of this year. Mexicos energy ministry has set a target for 35 percent of power generation to come from non-fossil fuel sources by 2024.
The current reform provides a real opportunity, particularly in the electricity reform, to increase investment in renewable energy generation in Mexico by opening up the sector and making other institutional changes, Christina McCain, Senior Manager for the Latin American Climate Initiative at the Environmental Defense Fund, told ClimateProgress in an email. Some in Mexico have criticized that the energy reform is missing an opportunity to provide more direct incentives to renewable energy. While the focus of the reform seems to have largely been on the major overhauls we hear most about, there is still opportunity to provide more direct incentives to renewables, as well as leverage existing laws designed to increase renewable sources in Mexicos energy mix.
- more -
http://thinkprogress.org/climate/2014/02/25/3328651/mexico-large-solar-plant-paz/
By Ari Phillips
Last week President Obama and Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper visited Mexico for whats traditionally called the Three Amigos meeting. In the daylong rendezvous, energy issues were slated to play a major role, with Obama and Harper jockeying for room when it comes to the impending decision on the controversial Keystone XL pipeline that would bring dirty crude oil down from Canada to refineries on the Gulf Coast.
However, Mexico also has some major energy changes in the pipeline, and after decades of state-run oil company PEMEX having sole purview over fossil fuel extraction, international investment and companies will now be let into the mix after recent constitutional reforms. This will increase oil flows from Americas southern neighbor into those same Gulf refineries as Keystone XL might. At the same time renewable energy has started to take off in Mexico, with construction of the biggest solar power plant in Latin America, Aura Solar I a 30-megawatt solar farm in La Paz, Mexico the latest signal.
If Mexican President Enrique Peña Nietos recent summit with North American leaders is an indication of the significance of the trios relationship, then his expected upcoming visit to the Aura I solar farm can be seen as a benchmark on the countrys path to a more renewable future. Mexico is poised to be Latin Americas solar hotbed according to Greentech Media, with the solar markets installed base expected to quadruple from 60 megawatts to 240 megawatts by the end of this year. Mexicos energy ministry has set a target for 35 percent of power generation to come from non-fossil fuel sources by 2024.
The current reform provides a real opportunity, particularly in the electricity reform, to increase investment in renewable energy generation in Mexico by opening up the sector and making other institutional changes, Christina McCain, Senior Manager for the Latin American Climate Initiative at the Environmental Defense Fund, told ClimateProgress in an email. Some in Mexico have criticized that the energy reform is missing an opportunity to provide more direct incentives to renewable energy. While the focus of the reform seems to have largely been on the major overhauls we hear most about, there is still opportunity to provide more direct incentives to renewables, as well as leverage existing laws designed to increase renewable sources in Mexicos energy mix.
- more -
http://thinkprogress.org/climate/2014/02/25/3328651/mexico-large-solar-plant-paz/
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Mexico Building Latin America’s Largest Solar Farm To Replace Old, Dirty Oil-Power Plant (Original Post)
ProSense
Feb 2014
OP
Sounds great. Wonder where their solar components come from, or if they're domestic. nt
freshwest
Feb 2014
#1
freshwest
(53,661 posts)1. Sounds great. Wonder where their solar components come from, or if they're domestic. nt
ProSense
(116,464 posts)2. Kick! n/t
NaturalHigh
(12,778 posts)3. I think large-scale solar projects are going to become...
more and more feasible and cost-effective over the next decade. I have heard, though, that there are still transmission and voltage support issues to be worked out.