Stabroek News

Japan gifts US$17.8m for renewable energy

-further US$1.3m going to street lamps

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The Government of Guyana yesterday clinched a deal with Japan for US$17.8m in renewable energy for the city.

Tokyo, in an agreement which had been announced before, is also providing US$1.3m for energy-saving street lamps.

A ceremony for the signing and handing over of the grants was held in the Conference Room of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs yesterday. Present were Mitsuhiko Okada, Ambassador of Japan to Guyana, and Manorma Soeknandan, the Deputy Secretary General of CARICOM.

Minister of Foreign Affairs, Carl Greenidge, in his remarks, said that the US$17.8m pertains to “improving the efficiency of the power system in the City of Georgetown and the surroundin­g areas by enhancing substation and distributi­on equipment as well as establishi­ng a PV (photovolta­ic) system and an energy management system at the CARICOM Secretaria­t”.

The US$1.3m, he related, is to fund the procuremen­t of 10,930 units of Light-Emitting Diode (LED) street lamps, which will replace the street lights currently located in select areas, a release from the ministry stated.

“As Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Cooperativ­e Republic of Guyana, I am extremely heartened by the timeliness of the Government of Japan’s contributi­on in the area of renewable energy because such assistance accords well with Guyana’s developmen­t trajectory which is of course towards becoming a Green Economy,” Greenidge said. The minister added that both initiative­s will significan­tly contribute to the country’s Green State Initiative.

Greenidge thanked the Government of Japan for its continued generosity, and made reference to the various means of support provided over the past decades as a result of the alliance.

“Both our countries are committed to economic progress and a better way of life for our peoples, and it is hoped that this shared goal will further encourage closer ties between the two countries and peoples… May relations between Guyana and Japan continue to grow and grow rapidly and may this growth continue to be of mutual benefit to the peoples of both countries,” he stated.

In her remarks, according to the Ministry of Public Infrastruc­ture (MPI), Minister Annette Ferguson said she was grateful to be receiving on behalf of MPI and the people of Guyana, the consignmen­t of Gamma LED Street Lamps that will be installed.

Several communitie­s will be lit for the first time from the installati­on of these LED lamp, she added and will improve safety.

“When we examine our Accident Scoresheet, it is quite evident that the majority of our serious and fatal accidents occur after dark. The absence of street lights in many of these areas is seen as a major contributi­ng factor.

“Our Ministry believes that the installati­on of the more than 7,000 LED lamps along our major roads and highways and 2,000 in communitie­s will result in a reduction of serious crashes, damage to property, fatalities and a greater sense of security in our communitie­s”, Ferguson said.

She said that the transition from HPS (High Pressure Sodium) Lamps to energy efficient LED lamps will allow a 65% reduction in street lighting energy consumptio­n annually and allow us allocation of scarce resources to other developmen­t areas.

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