China Daily Global Weekly

Latin America gains partner in green push

Expertise, credit from China brighten LAC’s prospects for renewable energy

- By SERGIO HELD in Cajica, Colombia The writer is a freelance journalist for China Daily.

“Nowadays, China is the largest producer of solar panels worldwide, with 70 percent of the market.”

RAMIRO NEGRETE

A renewable-energy consultant and clean-energy project developer

Anewly opened solar energy park in Argentina — the largest in Latin America — serves as an example of how countries across the region are leveraging Chinese expertise and technology in renewable energy.

Stretching across about 600 hectares in Argentina’s Jujuy Province, the Cauchari Solar Park was built by Power Constructi­on Corp of China and Shanghai Electric Power Constructi­on Co, with funding from China Exim Bank. It has 1.2 million solar panels that generate 300 megawatts of electricit­y.

“A state policy on renewable energy has given a big boost to those types of energy and to the developmen­t of wind energy and solar energy projects in Argentina,” Ramiro Negrete, a renewable-energy consultant and clean-energy project developer, said after the park’s official launch on Sept 26.

Argentina aims to generate at least 20 percent of its energy from renewables by the middle of this decade. It now up to about 8 percent.

“Nowadays, we have almost 3.8 gigawatts of installed capacity of renewable energy, most of it generated from wind power, and we have more than 702 megawatts of solar energy installed and running, which is not little,” said Andres Persello, a renewable-energy expert.

Argentina is roughly on par with Latin America, which draws 6.5 percent of its energy from wind and solar, while fossil fuels account for about three-fourths of primary energy supply. The rest comprises a mix of hydropower and bioenergy.

Chinese firms are deeply involved in Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC). China Power Constructi­on Group built the Cauchari park, while Sany and Goldwind have been seeking opportunit­ies. Shenzhen’s Risen Energy is building a plant in Cuba. Trina Solar, based in Changzhou in Jiangsu province, is building a solar plant in Colombia. Shanghai’s Envision Energy is exploring opportunit­ies in Mexico.

There is plenty of scope to expand the region’s mix of renewables, including hydropower in Brazil and solar in places like Chile, which has some of the highest rates of solar radiation that can be converted to power. For Argentina and Colombia, there is potential in wind power.

In Chile, China Constructi­on Bank and Industrial and Commercial Bank of China funded the Punta Sierra wind farm, which was built by China

State Power Investment Corp. It supplies energy to 130,000 homes. China is also investing heavily in Chilean infrastruc­ture. At the same time, Chile has relied on affordable Chinese solar panels to expand its installed solar power capacity.

Expanding solar capacity is not cheap, especially for struggling economies. Argentina has experience­d the challenges firsthand and has been able to overcome funding difficulti­es with China’s help. Negrete said the Cauchari park cost about $541 million and China Exim Bank provided a credit line covering around two-thirds of the cost, at 3 percent per year.

The Cauchari plant opened almost a year after another solar park, in Cafayate, began distributi­ng clean energy in Argentina. The Cafayate park has 290,000 solar panels over 180 hectares and produces 100 MW. Both projects were made possible by Chinese solar panel technology.

“China’s role here is prepondera­nt in photovolta­ics. They really are the ones who set the pace in technology, the price of the panels and providing the panels,” Persello said.

“Nowadays, China is the largest producer of solar panels worldwide, with 70 percent of the market,” said Negrete, noting that one of the largest solar parks in the world is in Northwest China’s Ningxia Hui autonomous region.

“The bilateral relationsh­ip between Argentina and China is going through a good moment in terms of cooperatio­n in its sixth year of a comprehens­ive strategic partnershi­p,” said Diego Marcos, founding member of the Civil Associatio­n for ArgentinaC­hina Cooperatio­n.

“The Belt and Road Initiative, with an eventual Argentine addition, presents a new starting point for the future of investment­s between the two,” he said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States