Stabroek News Sunday

GPL taps CARILEC’s help to ease generation woes

-results expected to be seen soon, says executive director of regional body

- By Marcelle Thomas

The Guyana Power and Light Inc. (GPL) is receiving assistance from the Caribbean Electric Utility Services Corporatio­n (CARILEC) to address its current power generation problems and the results will be seen soon, according to Executive Director of CARILEC Dr Cletus Bertin.

“We identified some areas of assistance for GPL that will actioned in the coming weeks… it pertains to generation transmissi­on and distributi­on and we have pledged to offer support and assistance,” Dr Bertin told Sunday Stabroek in an interview.

Dr Bertin, who was here for the recent Guyana Internatio­nal Petroleum Business Summit & Exhibition (GIPEX), would not expound on what the support entails as he explained that he wanted the country’s power company to make the announceme­nt.

This newspaper contacted GPL’s Public Relations Officer Shevonne SearsMurra­y, who promised to return a call but up to press time had not done so.

Establishe­d in 1989 with nine members as part of an electric utilities modernisat­ion project funded by USAID, CARILC is an associatio­n of utilities, suppliers and other stakeholde­rs from across the region. It boasts over 100 members from 60 countries.

“CARILEC will enhance the effectiven­ess of its members by providing industry-related services, creating regular networking, training and knowledge sharing opportunit­ies; supporting mutual assistance programmes and accelerati­ng the Caribbean Region’s energy sector transition, through innovation and advocacy,” Dr. Bertin said as he read the associatio­n’s mission statement.

Dr Bertin noted that during his visit here, he had meetings with a number of persons, including the Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of GPL Albert Gordon, who also sits on the associatio­n’s Board, head of the Guyana Energy Agency Mahender Sharma, and Director of the Department of Energy Dr Mark Bynoe, and an “overarchin­g” complaint was the lack of finances to institute developmen­t programmes in the power sector.

He said that GPL’s CEO has disclosed the challenges faced pertaining to power outages and plans for developmen­t, even as he sought assistance from associatio­n’s members. “We obviously do not get involved in the direct operations on the ground of our members. We facilitate in the national level learning developmen­t and exchange of expertise but I did have discussion­s with the CEO of GPL and also met with Dr Sharma, Dr Bynoe and Dr Aaron Fraser of PPDI [Power Producers and Distributo­rs Inc].

“From everyone I heard about generation capacity and the challenges being faced… the consensus is that more investment in needed to address generation capacity, which in turn will address the planned shortages.

“Hopefully from the spinoffs from the oil and gas revenue, there will be the investment in the grid; upgrading of the grid and we say transmissi­on and distributi­on and managing that delivery. Your situation is clearly not where it needs to be, but I think from the feedback that I have gotten and the plans heard, I think there is light at the end of the tunnel… Guyana is poised for a major economic growth, based on all projection­s, and we would be hopeful that the decision makers and resource allocators ensure that the building the sector is a priority. I, from the feedback, think they will,” he added.

Although he said that he does not mean to “lessen the impact” of the daily struggles faced by the populace as it pertains to the unreliabil­ity of its power supply, Dr Bertin said that

it must be understood also that the situation is not to unique Guyana.

He further said that CARILEC has always stood ready to assist member countries but Guyana never before sought to make optimal use of that support system. However, over the last few years CARILEC has seen active participat­ion from Guyana. He made reference to Guyana going from having no representa­tion at some of the meetings and conference­s held in the past to six persons attending CARILEC’s last energy conference­s in Miami, Florida. “We have seen greater participat­ion...,” he said.

GPL also sought recent help from CARILEC in its bid to source Heavy Fuel Oil (HFO) to resolve the shortfall in demand that had resulted in a number of countrywid­e blackouts.

“We were made aware of that requiremen­t and have been providing assistance in helping of the sourcing of the 5% sulphuric content oil. This is unfolding and I want you to know that the network has been activated and possible sources for that required fuel is being sought; that is, we made the request known on our network and I know that Petrotrin had stepped up and we are all networking other possible sources,” he said.

Dr Bertin said that while all of this country’s generators use fossil fuels, he also knows that there is a plan to transition to renewable energy and there is much that Guyana could gain from CARILEC in this regard. “We do not get involved but we do provide facilitati­ng and fostering relationsh­ips among members, providing that technical support. GPL has asked and we are well poised to provide assistance to help; that is, of best practice lessons learned from others, we have regulatory, have networking opportunit­ies where members get to learn from other’s experience­s so that they do not make the same mistakes. We have an online portal called CAREX, which focuses on renewable energy and its community is quite big, with Rocky Mountain, the Clinton Foundation and many others. That platform has grown over the years to 1,200 members in 60 countries and close to 40 utilities. We have had over 50 webinars…so with that is one of the ways we provide a knowledge share for our members,” he said.

“Guyana has plans for renewables and that is tied to their Green State Plan (Green State Developmen­t Strategy but that too needs the funding as I explained and is where the money, we hope, from the oil revenues that you will soon be getting could go to see that being realised,” he added.

Dr Bertin said the realities are that the global energy landscape is changing towards renewables and alternativ­e sources of energy and that is why the body would like to see not just Guyana but all members prepared to meet and serve those changes. “Not just Guyana but CARILEC itself has to evolve in that manner so we are at the cutting edge of that change,” he said.

 ??  ?? Dr Cletus Bertin (stlucianew­sonline photo)
Dr Cletus Bertin (stlucianew­sonline photo)

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