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St. Kitts and Nevis Sustainable Energy Plan

St. Kitts and Nevis Sustainable Energy Plan. Initial Stakeholders Meeting June 13, 2006. St. Kitts and Nevis – A Clean Energy Nation. The Federation Government has expressed its commitment to increasing the sustainability of the energy sector.

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St. Kitts and Nevis Sustainable Energy Plan

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  1. St. Kitts and Nevis Sustainable Energy Plan Initial Stakeholders Meeting June 13, 2006

  2. St. Kitts and Nevis – A Clean Energy Nation • The Federation Government has expressed its commitment to increasing the sustainability of the energy sector. • Sustainability may be achieved through the diversification of electricity generation, increased use of renewable natural resources, increased energy efficiency and conservation, and improved transportation systems.

  3. Global Sustainable Energy Islands Initiative Formed as an informal partnership in 2001 – in response to St. Lucia’s commitment to become a sustainable energy demonstration country Partners: OAS ESG The Climate Institute UNIDO UNF Partner countries Who Is GSEII?

  4. What is the history of SEP development in the Eastern Caribbean? • St. Lucia Prime Minister Kenny Anthony made first formal commitment at the Hague in 2000 • St. Lucia SEP developed via a consultative process • St. Lucia SEP adopted by Cabinet in 2005 • Dominica and Grenada SEPs prepared in 2003 • Adopted as operational plans by Public Works (Energy) Ministries • SEP implementation in each of three countries

  5. Why Should St. Kitts and Nevis Care about the Energy Sector? • High price of electricity – Caused by: • total dependence on imported petroleum for electricity generation…high price of petroleum (US$70+/barrel) • Inefficiency of small diesel gen-sets • High maintenance requirements/poor reliability of small diesel gen-sets results in electricity outages • Negative Environmental impacts associated with diesel powered generation

  6. Goals for a Sustainable Energy Plan • Increased economic development • Reduce fossil fuel imports • Increase development and use of domestic natural resources • Increase local employment and energy sector opportunities • Lower energy costs • Attract technology transfer/foreign investment • Improved environmental protection • Local environment (improved tourism appeal) • Global environment (mitigate climate change emissions)

  7. Defining a Course of Action • The Government of St. Kitts and Nevis, in collaboration with GSEII may prepare the way for Clean Energy Development through the development of a Sustainable Energy Plan • Articulate national goals and priorities for the energy sector • Establish specific energy sector targets • Renewable energy utilization • Energy efficiency/conservation • Articulate actions required to achieve the stated goals

  8. Elements of a SEP

  9. Outline Current Energy Conditions A. Legal Structure - Electricity • State run utilities control generation, transmission and distribution • St. Kitts Electricity Department • NEVLEC • Limited or no opportunities for private power generation • Regulated pricing (Current Prices?) • Subsidies required to maintain “affordable electricity?” (Level of subsidies?)

  10. I. Outline Current Energy Conditions, Cont. B. Electricity Generation portfolio • Installed capacity • Demand characteristics • Key consumers (tourism, medical school, light industry, government, etc.) • Projections for expansion

  11. Summary of Generation Characteristics (July 2005)

  12. Projections for Demand Growth – St. Kitts [1] Source: Generation Expansion Plan (2005-2015), St. Kitts Electricity Department (2005)

  13. Projections for Demand Growth - Nevis

  14. I. Outline Current Energy Conditions, Cont. • Transportation Sector • Government purchase and sale of gasoline • Cost of gasoline at the pump? • Subsidies to maintain affordable gas prices? • Transportation infrastructure plan? • Average age of vehicle fleet? • Organization of public transportation?

  15. II. Establish SEP Energy Sector Targets A. Electricity Sector • Demand reductions (DSM; EE) • 2011: Reduce demand by X%; X MW installed; X GWh generated • 2016: Reduce demand by X%: X MW installed; X GWh generated • Renewable Energy Installations • 2011: X MW (X% of projected demand) • 2016: X MW (X% of projected demand) • GHG Emissions Reductions: X% reduction in diesel consumption/X% reduction in GHG (TOC)

  16. II. Establish SEP Energy Sector Targets, Cont. B. Transportation Sector • Improve mileage efficiency of vehicle fleet by X% • Improve/increase use of public sector transportation • Produce locally, for transportation use, X gallons of ethanol • Import hybrid vehicles, E85 vehicles and other alternative fueled vehicles as appropriate

  17. III. Outline Potential Mix of Sustainable Energy Technologies • Grid-tied renewable energy alternatives • Household and off-grid renewable energy alternatives • Energy efficiency measures • Transportation sector measures

  18. Likely Near-Term Grid-tied Renewable Energy Alternatives • Geothermal power generation on Nevis • St. Kitts and Nevis participates in the GEF/UNEP sponsored Geo-Caraïbes Project • Pre-Feasibility study (geology, geochemistry and prelim geophysics) suggests 10MW+ potential in the Bath/Farms Estate area

  19. Likely Near-Term Grid-tied Renewable Energy Alternatives • Biomass to Energy on St. Kitts • Utilize sugar cane and municipal solid waste to produced ethanol and electricity • Need to assess optimal utilization biomass • Sufficient feedstock for commercial production? • Economical to revitalize sugarcane crop? • Long term reliability of feedstocks? • Potential for ethanol exports? • GSEII embarking on commercial-style feasibility study to determine biomass to energy potential

  20. Likely Near-Term Grid-tied Renewable Energy Alternatives • Wind, OTEC and others • Need site specific resource assessments to determine potential • Wind – broad analysis • Average wind speed = 6.18 m/s (10 m height) (St. Kitts) • Average wind speed = 7.89 m/s (10 m height) (Nevis)

  21. Likely Near-Term Distributed Renewable Energy Alternatives • The most obvious opportunity for households, hotels, other buildings is solar hot water heaters • Key opportunity to reduce energy consumption • Solar PV and distributed wind show promise for buildings • Possible interconnection to the grid (net metering)

  22. Likely Energy Efficiency Alternatives • Improvements to electric utility system (example Dominica) • Commercial and Household energy conservation/DSM • Commercial and Household use of energy efficient appliances and lighting • Implement EE standards and regulations • Solar H20

  23. Likely Transportation Sector Alternatives • Increase mileage efficiency • Incorporate hybrid vehicles • Use of ethanol as a 10% blend (standard vehicles) or high percentage (E85) blend in flex fuel vehicles • Improvements in public transport system • Increase alternatives for pedestrian and bicycle traffic (bike lanes)

  24. IV. Potential Actions to Achieve Targets • Promotion of Grid-Tied Renewables • Liberalize electric utilities (including public private partnerships) • Mandate Renewable Energy Technology Use • Renewable energy portfolio standard (require 10-30% of installed capacity from renewables) • Attract private power developers for alterative energy solutions • Offer long-term PPAs • Offer tax and other fiscal incentives

  25. IV. Potential Actions to Achieve Targets • Promotion of Grid-Tied Renewables, Cont. • Make firm commitments to key project opportunities (geothermal, biomass, etc.) • Deliver on government responsibilities related to project developments (ie. Development of the sugarcane/feedstock supply, commit to long term PPAs, execute permits and licensing, etc.) • Increase human capacity/awareness • Establish utility training programs • Launch national education/awareness program • Seek international financing/resources for renewable energy feasibility and development (GEF, CDM, EU, World Bank…)

  26. IV. Potential Actions to Achieve Targets • Promotion of Distributed Renewables • National Solar Water Heating Initiative • National awareness initiative • Tax relief for solar water heating system purchases • Solar hot water heating loan program • Encourage solar PV system deployment • Attract solar manufacturer/assembly plant investment

  27. IV. Potential Actions to Achieve Targets • Promotion of Energy Efficiency Improvements • Compact fluorescent lightbulb program (Cuba or GSEII/Climate Care) • Public buildings energy efficiency assessments and retrofits • Initiate comprehensive capacity building initiative • Catalyze the establishment of ESCOs • Launch national DSM program • Establish appliance and building norms and standards • Create/promote hotel “Green Globe Program”

  28. IV. Potential Actions to Achieve Targets • Cross-Cutting Electricity Sector Issues • Electricity system improvements • Promote Climate Change/CDM strategy

  29. IV. Potential Actions to Achieve Targets • Transportation Sector Reforms • Establish alternative fuel vehicle demo fleet • Impose regulations for higher efficiency among vehicles • Improvements in public transportation systems • Modifications to roads/traffic patterns

  30. V. Next Steps in the Development of a SEP • Complete assessment of current conditions – by 23 June • Stakeholder dialogue and individual consultations on priorities – by 30 June • Draft 1 of SEP by GSEII distributed to Stakeholders for review – by 15 July • Revisions thru to Final Draft by 1 Sept • Submission to Cabinet for Consideration by 15 Sept

  31. Contact Information • Mark Lambrides mlambrides@oas.org +1-202-458-6261 • Kevin de Cuba kdecuba@oas.org +1-202-458- • Maria Rivera maria@energyandssecurity.com +1-703-

  32. Thank You!

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