Jamaica Gleaner

Ja leads in Branson-ba cked plan for a Caribbean climate revolution

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AFTER HURRICANES Irma and Maria tore through the Caribbean in 2017, devastatin­g dozens of islands – including billionair­e Richard Branson’s private isle, Necker Island – Branson called for a ‘Caribbean Marshall Plan’.

He wanted world powers and global financial institutio­ns to unite to protect the Caribbean against the effects of climate change.

That hasn’t happened. So Branson and his government partners from 27 Caribbean countries hope that his celebrity, connection­s and billions will prod local politician­s and the financial community to act.

In August 2018, at a star-studded event at the University of the West Indies in Mona, Jamaica, Branson helped to launch the Caribbean Climate-Smart Accelerato­r, a US$1 billion effort to kick-start a green energy revolution in the region.

Its aims include convincing global financial institutio­ns to fund ambitious climate-mitigation efforts in the Caribbean, upgrading critical infrastruc­ture across this vulnerable region.

Well before Branson’s arrival, however, some Caribbean countries were already working to break their dependence on fossil fuels.

Even prior to the debilitati­ng 2017 hurricane season, polling showed that a strong majority of people in the Caribbean see climate change as a very serious threat.

The region – where we study renewable energy and climate change – is home to 16 of the world’s most climate-vulnerable countries.

That’s because the stronger and more frequent storms, extreme droughts, and coastal flooding that result from rising global temperatur­es hit rural island nations hard.

Before Branson took up the cause, several Caribbean nations were upgrading their electric grids to improve energy independen­ce and better prepare islands for the impacts of storms that knock out power.

Jamaica opened the largest wind farm in the English-speaking Caribbean in 2004. The Wigton Wind Farm now helps power over 55,000 surroundin­g homes, households that would formerly have used some 60,000 barrels of oil annually.

As part of its national goal to generate 50 per cent of all its power using renewable sources, Jamaica now hopes to build offshore wind farms.

It has also enhanced the stability of its grid with a hybrid energy storage system that uses a flywheel and a battery to store solar and wind energy for use as needed, including after storms.

FROM ZERO TO 100

Dominica is another Caribbean pioneer in climate mitigation.

This tiny island already generates 28 per cent of its electricit­y from wind, hydropower, and other renewable sources. In contrast, 0.3 per cent of electricit­y in Trinidad and Tobago, the Caribbean’s main oil exporter, is renewable.

In an effort to diversify its energy sources away from diesel, Dominica’s government has secured US$30 million from the internatio­nal Climate Investment Fund and US$90 million

from the United Kingdom to invest in geothermal energy.

The country is on track to reach 100 per cent renewable energy by the end of this year. If it succeeds, it will join Iceland in entirely forgoing dirty oil, coal, and gas energy.

Dominica may soon have some more local competitio­n.

Barbados, in the eastern Caribbean, hopes to use 100 per ceent renewable energy sources by 2030 using a mix of wind, solar, and biofuels derived from food waste and grass, which could benefit the island’s ailing agricultur­al sector.

Such policies are what Branson and others call “climate smart”. While preparing countries for extreme weather, they create jobs and boost key industries. The result is an economy custom-built for the future.

This is already happening, albeit slowly, in

many countries worldwide.

In the United States, wind and solar are already financiall­y competitiv­e, with traditiona­l coal power in many places, particular­ly for new power generators. So, over time, as older facilities age out across the globe, these technologi­es are being replaced with modern energy systems.

CARIBBEAN ACADEMICS TAKE THE LEAD

As in other places, the process of moving more Caribbean countries off fossil fuels requires mustering the political will and financial means needed to transform a nation’s entire grid.

For over a century, government­s have created regulatory systems and policies designed around imported fossil fuels. Replacing the archaic tax incentives and regulation­s that discourage renewable energy developmen­t takes time, effort and money.

Doing so requires a detailed analysis of a country’s relationsh­ip with energy. How are homes, businesses, tourism, farms and transporta­tion networks powered? Which energy alternativ­e is best suited for each use? What resources are available?

In our observatio­n, local academics played a strong role in getting policymake­rs in Jamaica, Barbados, and Dominica to undertake these kinds of assessment­s.

University of the West Indies professor Michael Taylor founded the Climate Studies Group to help the region adapt to life with climate change.

Failure to prepare for future storms would mean “the destructio­n of ‘island life’ as we know it”, Taylor said.

It was an academic, too, who, in 2014, first pushed Barbados to commit to shifting entirely over to clean energy.

BARBADOS’ CLEAN REVOLUTION

Professor Olav Hohmeyer of Germany’s Flensburg University – who was then teaching at the University of the West Indies – told the recently formed Barbados Renewable Energy Associatio­n that the island had the natural resources necessary to become 100 per cent renewable within 10 years.

The university and the energy associatio­n worked to convince Barbados’ electric utility, central bank, farmers, and local policymake­rs that an islandwide energy transition was feasible – and strategic.

They also engaged the Inter-American Developmen­t Bank, which, in 2016, published a detailed and generally positive assessment on renewable energy developmen­t in Barbados.

Politician­s in Barbados were slower to come around, weighing the cost of green energy against other national developmen­t priorities. Then came the 2017 hurricane season. In May 2018, Mia Mottley of the leftist Labour Party was elected prime minister of Barbados with a bold sustainabi­lity pledge.

At the United Nations General Assembly later that year, Mottley declared that her country would be 100 per cent renewable by 2030. And she insisted that the world must help Barbados and other island nations in their climate-change fight.

Her Labour Party even envisages electrifyi­ng Barbados’ busy Bridgetown port, allowing the 500 cruise ships that dock each year to plug into batteryrun power sources rather than operating on-board generators.

Three Caribbean countries are well on their way to becoming “climate smart.”With internatio­nal support, the other 23 may get there, too. Written by Masaō Ashtine of The University of the West Indies, Mona campus, and Tom Rogers of Coventry University and republishe­d from The Conversati­on via AP.

 ?? IAN ALLEN/PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? In this August 9, 2018, file photo, Prime Minister Andrew Holness (second right) is greeted by Sir Richard Branson (left) of The Virgin Group, at the launch of the Caribbean Climate-Smart Accelerato­r at the Mona campus of The University of the West Indies. Olympian Usain Bolt is at second left and UWI Vice Chancellor Sir Hilary Beckles is at right.
IAN ALLEN/PHOTOGRAPH­ER In this August 9, 2018, file photo, Prime Minister Andrew Holness (second right) is greeted by Sir Richard Branson (left) of The Virgin Group, at the launch of the Caribbean Climate-Smart Accelerato­r at the Mona campus of The University of the West Indies. Olympian Usain Bolt is at second left and UWI Vice Chancellor Sir Hilary Beckles is at right.
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