Stabroek News

Richard Branson’s green energy plan for Caribbean may include debt relief

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MIAMI, (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - A plan by British billionair­e Richard Branson to lead a post-hurricane rebuilding effort in the Caribbean, with a focus on clean energy projects, may include debt relief negotiatio­ns mediated by the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund.

Branson is spearheadi­ng a plan to help Caribbean nations recover after Hurricanes Irma and Maria ravaged several islands. The centerpiec­e of the plan is a push to replace outdated fossil-fuel power grids with renewable energy systems that can withstand extreme weather and boost economic developmen­t in Caribbean.

For the past month, the founder of the Virgin Group conglomera­te has been in talks with some of the world’s top multilater­al lenders and foundation­s to set up a fund to finance what he called the Disaster Recovery Marshall Plan – a reference to a program to rebuild Western Europe after World War Two.

The effort focuses on “a green energy revolution” to make Caribbean economies more sustainabl­e, Branson said.

The businessma­n has lived in the British Virgin Islands for more than a decade and weathered Hurricane Irma inside a cellar on Necker, his private island.

“We want to move the Caribbean countries into clean energy and make them more sustainabl­e, which will make dealing with hurricanes much easier,” he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation in an interview in Miami.

“The Caribbean heads of state agree with one voice that this is a good idea,” he added.

The resilience push aims to provide immediate and long-term relief assistance, as well as better insurance policies against natural disasters.

Branson said that he met with IMF chief Christine Lagarde during the fund’s annual meeting in Washington earlier this month and that she offered to facilitate meetings between Caribbean nations and creditors to reduce the costs of existing debt.

“We will talk to the Caribbean heads of state and see if they would be interested in that,” Branson said. “It could save them a lot of money.”

The IMF said it is “closely engaged with the authoritie­s in the Caribbean, and is exploring ways in which it can help member countries affected by the hurricanes, including the provision of financing through rapid credit facilities,” according to an e-mailed statement from director of communicat­ions Gerry Rice.

The World Bank and the InterAmeri­can Developmen­t Bank have agreed to finance a secretaria­t that will manage the Caribbean recovery efforts, Branson said. He added the World Bank is working to lower borrowing costs on its loans to help Caribbean nations implement projects.

Branson is a longtime clean energy activist and investor. In 2009 he cofounded the Carbon War Room, a global non-profit organizati­on that aims to strengthen and expand economic efforts not reliant on fossil fuels.

His Virgin group last year acquired BMR Energy, a developer of wind energy projects in the Caribbean and Latin America. The company’s main asset is a wind farm in Jamaica. The company is Branson’s first investment in wind energy.

The 36 megawatt plant, 90 kilometers from Kingston, is the country’s largest private-sector renewable energy project and is expected to reduce greenhouse gases each year by an amount equivalent to taking 13,000 cars off the road.

The plant serves about 15,000 customers with 11 wind turbines that can generate 1200,000 megawatts per year or about 3 percent of Jamaica’s energy demand.

Bruce Levy, the company’s CEO, said the Jamaica project is a good example of how the inclusion of renewables in the energy mix can help Caribbean nations reduce dependence on dirty fuels and cut energy prices, which could boost their economic developmen­t.

“The price of solar and other renewable technologi­es has come down significan­tly over the last two years, so now it will make a lot more sense,” he said in an interview, adding that the idea of revamping entire energy grids in the Caribbean has gained momentum in the aftermath of Irma and Maria.

Caribbean nations pay some of the highest prices for fuel in the world because of the logistical difficulti­es in transport and distributi­on, Levy added.

Like most of its neighbours, Jamaica relies heavily on imported fossil fuels to power its electricit­y grid, which could face threats from disruption­s such as hurricanes.

Building smaller grids with solar and wind generation means that systems can be more easily and quickly fixed when hit by storms, or that only part of the grid system would be affected, Levy said.

Cost reductions would also come from more efficient transmissi­on and distributi­on systems, he said.

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Richard Branson

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