USAID Caribbean Clean Energy Program Helps Green the Grid

USAID Mission Director Christopher Cushing (4th left) other USAID staff  and CARCEP officials pose for a photo following the wor
USAID Mission Director Christopher Cushing (4th left) other USAID staff and CARCEP officials pose for a photo following the workshop.

For Immediate Release

Tuesday, July 5, 2016

The United States Agency for International Development (USAID) Caribbean Clean Energy Program (CARCEP) is assisting Caribbean nations to become more energy efficient through policies and incentives that promote low emission growth and greater public/private sector investment in clean energy development.

Over forty representatives and experts from the Caribbean energy sector met in Barbados last week for a USAID-CARCEP Regional Smart Grid Working Group Forum aimed at developing strategies to transition power grids in the region to smart technology. Contributors included energy specialists from the Barbados Energy Division, the Caribbean Electric Utility Services Corporation (CARILEC), the Caribbean Community (CARICOM), and various electric utility companies, regulators, financiers, international donor organizations, and equipment suppliers.

The inaugural forum presented the smart grid digital technology as a key enabler to clean energy development in the Caribbean and provided a platform for each country to share plans for upgrading their respective power networks. The exchange resulted in the outlining of fundamental strategies to advance design and implementation of country-specific smart grid systems.

In addressing the forum, USAID Mission Director, Christopher Cushing, said clean energy was a major priority of the U.S. Government, with billions of dollars invested in renewable energy and energy –efficient projects in the United States.

“We are also witnessing tremendous commitment globally to address this challenge. At Paris COP 21, commitments given by countries will result in renewables making up 78 percent of new power generation investment by 2030. Many countries in the Caribbean have ambitious goals for the percentage of renewable energy in the electricity sector. At the 41st Special Meeting of the Commission on Trade and economic development, CARICOM adopted a target of 47 percent renewable energy by 2027. Initiatives like the USAID Caribbean Clean Energy Program can play an important role if we want to meet these goals,” he added.

Head of Systems Operation at the Jamaica Power Services Company Ltd., Ricardo Case, highlighted the environmental and reduced cost-of-power benefits that smart grid technology affords consumers using electronically operated mechanisms.

The smart grid technology will deliver benefits by helping Caribbean countries increase reliability, energy efficiency, and allow for the sustainable integration of renewable energy sources such as solar, wind, and hydroelectric energy into power networks.

The working group forum was preceded by a two-day training workshop on Smart Grid Modelling and Control for Island Utilities, during which USAID CARCEP awarded 22 scholarships to key energy stakeholders from across the region.