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Related: About this forumWind of change sweeps through energy policy in the Caribbean
Wind of change sweeps through energy policy in the Caribbean
Islands follow Aruba's lead in switching to renewable energy sources and reaping health and economic benefits
Aruba in the southern Caribbean has 107,000 people, a lot of wind and sun and, until very recently, one very big problem. Despite the trade winds and sunshine, it was spending more than 16% of its economy on importing 6,500 barrels of diesel fuel a day to generate electricity. People were furious at the tripling of energy prices in 10 years and the resulting spiralling costs of imported water and food.
That changed at the Rio earth summit in 2012, when the prime minister, Mike Eman, announced that the former oil-producing Dutch island close to Venezuela planned to switch to 100% renewables by 2020.
Working with the independent US energy group the Rocky Mountain Institute and the business NGO Carbon War Room, Aruba ditched its old steam turbines for more efficient engines and changed the way it desalinated seawater.
It cost $300m (£183m), says the energy minister and deputy PM Mike D'Emeza, but Aruba immediately halved its fuel consumption and saved itself $85m a year. It then built a 30MW wind farm and cut its diesel consumption a further 50%. Now it is planning another wind farm and a large solar park. By 2020, Aruba will be free from fossil fuels and possibly storing renewable electricity under water or using ice.
The move to energy independence has had dramatic results...
Islands follow Aruba's lead in switching to renewable energy sources and reaping health and economic benefits
Aruba in the southern Caribbean has 107,000 people, a lot of wind and sun and, until very recently, one very big problem. Despite the trade winds and sunshine, it was spending more than 16% of its economy on importing 6,500 barrels of diesel fuel a day to generate electricity. People were furious at the tripling of energy prices in 10 years and the resulting spiralling costs of imported water and food.
That changed at the Rio earth summit in 2012, when the prime minister, Mike Eman, announced that the former oil-producing Dutch island close to Venezuela planned to switch to 100% renewables by 2020.
Working with the independent US energy group the Rocky Mountain Institute and the business NGO Carbon War Room, Aruba ditched its old steam turbines for more efficient engines and changed the way it desalinated seawater.
It cost $300m (£183m), says the energy minister and deputy PM Mike D'Emeza, but Aruba immediately halved its fuel consumption and saved itself $85m a year. It then built a 30MW wind farm and cut its diesel consumption a further 50%. Now it is planning another wind farm and a large solar park. By 2020, Aruba will be free from fossil fuels and possibly storing renewable electricity under water or using ice.
The move to energy independence has had dramatic results...
http://www.theguardian.com/global-development/poverty-matters/2014/feb/10/wind-of-change-energy-policy-caribbean
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Wind of change sweeps through energy policy in the Caribbean (Original Post)
kristopher
Feb 2014
OP
Mika
(17,751 posts)1. Another news blackout of the largest Caribbean nation.
Apparently, to the western corporocratic media, Cuba isn't a part of the Caribbean.
Cuba strides in renewable energy development
http://www.globaltimes.cn/content/805102.shtml#.UvlMECgWw-Y
madokie
(51,076 posts)2. Another of Amory Lovins helping
Ah yes the big guy would have a fit if he was to read this huh.
Lovins has done more to help in reducing our co2 as any one man alive, I do think.
quadrature
(2,049 posts)3. getting rid of middle-east crude oil...
everybody wins