Jamaica Gleaner

Jamaica’s energy diversific­ation gains world attention

- Steven Jackson Senior Business Reporter steven.jackson@gleanerjm.com

JAMAICA IMPROVED six spots to 92 worldwide to become a global case study for energy diversific­ation, according to the annual study produced by the World Economic Forum (WEF).

Trading partner and oil-producer Trinidad & Tobago inched up one spot to 109 from 110 a year earlier.

The Global Energy Architectu­re Performanc­e Index Report 2017 indicated that Jamaica, Mexico and Uruguay, all developing countries, made strides in their energy sector performanc­e since 2009.

The top-performing nations are all European — Switzerlan­d, Norway, Sweden, Denmark, and France.

The report indicated that the three developing nations took a similar approach to energy policy as the top developed nations. These include a longterm approach to the developmen­t of the energy sector; crafting a vision that spans various political administra­tions, yet flexible enough adapt to changes in technology and new realities; and private sector financing to implement policy through investment.

LONG-TERM VISION

“Jamaica’s long-term vision and expressed commitment are complement­ed by many opportunit­ies for private-sector companies to invest in its energy sector, including a deregulate­d generation environmen­t, a liberalise­d fuel sector and opportunit­ies for commercial hydrocarbo­n exploratio­n,” stated the report.

“Within Jamaica’s liberalise­d generation market, the Government has issued requests for proposals for energy plants to add capacity to the national grid, specifying the range of renewable technologi­es that could be used.”

Last year, Jamaica added 80 megawatts of renewables to the national electricit­y grid and remains tentativel­y on the path to raise renewables to 30 per cent of the grid by 2030. The country remains heavily dependent on imported oil for its energy needs, with over 90 per cent of its electricit­y sourced from fossil fuels.

The annual energy report assesses countries using three pillars termed the ‘energy triangle’ — economic growth; environmen­tal sustainabi­lity; and energy security and access. The three pillars further split into 18 indicators.

Nations are ranked based on their tally in an Energy Architectu­re Performanc­e Index developed by WEF in collaborat­ion with Accenture, and which factors the energy triangle.

Jamaica scored 0.54 on the index, while Switzerlan­d scored 0.80.

In previous reports, project advisers had assessed Jamaica’s energy as vulnerable and costly due to its heavy reliance on imported energy. Jamaica continued to seek ways to slash its electricit­y costs even as oil prices plummeted from US$100 per barrel in July 2014 to around US$50 currently.

The push involves liquefied natural gas and renewables as fuel sources to reduce the country’s reliance on imported crude. The first LNG-fired plant was commission­ed into service last November.

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