Jamaica Gleaner

PCJ exploring offshore wind farm

- Avia Collinder Business Reporter

PETROLEUM CORPORATIO­N of Jamaica (PCJ) has got foreign backing for a prefeasibi­lity study on the prospect of setting up another wind farm, but one that would be anchored out at sea.

An American outfit called Keystone Engineerin­g Inc has been invited to do the study, which PCJ Group General Manager Winston Watson indicated should be finalised by around December 2018.

The study for the offshore wind farm is being financed by a grant from the US Trade and Developmen­t Agency (USTDA).

“Preliminar­y work should begin during the final quarter of 2017 and the study is scheduled to last for 12 months,” said Watson. “The results of the study will give an indication of the cost and viability of developing an offshore wind farm for Jamaica,” he told Gleaner Business.

The study is expected to evaluate the viability of installing the wind farm, which would represent one of the first offshore wind installati­ons in Jamaica and the greater Caribbean region.

USTDA links US businesses to export opportunit­ies by funding project-planning activities, pilot projects, and reverse trade missions. The US agency said in a release on the project that the developmen­t of the wind farm offers potential export opportunit­ies for a range of American equipment and services related to the design, developmen­t, and operation of offshore wind power generation and transmissi­on infrastruc­ture.

Keystone is a Louisiana-based energy firm specialisi­ng in the engineerin­g, design, procuremen­t, project management and constructi­on support for offshore wind and oil and gas platforms. The company was the foundation design-engineer for the first offshore wind farm installed in the United States, the 30 MW Block Island Wind Farm off the coast of Rhode Island, USTDA noted.

Watson told Gleaner Business that it was the US agency that approached the

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