Otago Daily Times

Mexico plays catchup with giant solar park

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PUERTO PENASCO: The first power from a giant solar energy park in the desert of northern Mexico will enter the country’s electricit­y grid in April, officials said yesterday as the nation aims to burnish its green credential­s with the flagship project.

President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador has hailed the $US1.6 billion project — set to be Latin America’s largest solar park — as key to reaching Mexico’s goal of producing at least 35% of all energy consumed from clean and renewable sources by 2024.

But environmen­talists and the opposition have dismissed the 2000ha project, known as Plan Sonora after the state where it is located, as a sideshow distractin­g from a retrograde nationalis­t energy policy that has prioritise­d state company CFE and its highly polluting power plants.

Lopez Obrador’s energy policy has also triggered a formal trade dispute with the United States and Canada, who allege Mexico breached their North American trade pact by tightening state control of its energy market and prejudicin­g foreign companies.

During a tour of the solar park yesterday, with a group of over 60 foreign diplomats, Mexican officials sought to dampen concerns over Lopez Obrador’s prior lack of dedication to renewables and energy transition.

‘‘Sonora is going to be [a] reference point for what [sustainabl­e] developmen­t should look like,’’ Foreign Minister Marcelo Ebrard said in a presentati­on after the tour.

‘‘We want to invite all the countries of the world to be part of that,’’ he said.

Mexico is looking for partners to help fund the park and the country’s broader transition to greener energy sources.

Lopez Obrador has said that the US could potentiall­y help finance constructi­on in Sonora.

State electricit­y utility CFE is tasked with developing the project and expects it to be fully operationa­l by 2027, with over two million solar panels providing electricit­y to Sonora and Baja California.

So far only a tenth of the panels have been put up. They stand in the desert sand in perfect regiment. Wires tangle from the panels, which have not yet been connected to the grid.

Although scientists rank Mexico as one of the places in the world with most solar potential, progress on renewables has been slow under Lopez Obrador.

The president, a leftist nationalis­t, has largely focused on upping fossil fuel exploratio­n and production — as well as refining — at state oil company Pemex.

Climate Action Tracker, an independen­t scientific project that tracks government climate action, still rates Mexico’s climate policies as ‘‘critically insufficie­nt’’ in meeting targets — and predicts that emissions will continue to rise through 2030. — Reuters

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? Next level . . . Solar panels of the largest solar plant in all of Latin America, which is being built by the state electric utility CFE, are pictured in Puerto Penasco, Sonora state, Mexico.
PHOTO: REUTERS Next level . . . Solar panels of the largest solar plant in all of Latin America, which is being built by the state electric utility CFE, are pictured in Puerto Penasco, Sonora state, Mexico.

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