Briefing note
With renewables accounting for 28 per cent of electricity generation, Dominica is the CARICOM member which consumes the largest proportion of its energy from renewable sources according to the newly released ECLAC study ‘Barriers to Identification and Implementation of Energy Efficiency Mechanisms and Enhancing Renewable Energy Technologies in the Caribbean’.
Today, Dominica is at the forefront in the use of renewable sources of energy among the OECS countries, having achieved 28 per cent of its present electricity generation from hydropower and wind.
Dominica aims to become energy self-sufficient by 2020. Investments by as much as US $20 million have already been made to develop the island’s geothermal energy potential. Solar and wind energy sources also exhibit high potential to satisfy this country’s energy needs.
The new ECLAC study forms part of a series of reports on Sustainable Energy in the Caribbean commissioned jointly with the German Federal Enterprise for International Cooperation (GIZ). The studies recognize that there are many barriers to the development of renewable energy technology in the Caribbean. Some of the areas noted are the lack of regulatory frameworks and legislation for private investors, gaps between policy targets and implementation, high initial investment costs and high transaction costs, lack of incentives or subsidies, and small markets.
According to the reports, countries that have made the most efforts towards promoting energy efficiency (Jamaica and Saint Vincent and the Grenadines)have up to three policies currently implemented, while six out of 16 countries are currently considering new measures to promote efficiency in their energy sector.
The reports represent the latest in a series of successful outcomes of the on-going collaboration between ECLAC and GIZ, in the context of a wider project on ‘Sustainable Energy in the Caribbean’.
For further information, please contact Alexander Voccia at alexander.voccia@eclac.org or Denise Balgobin at denise.balgobin@eclac.org. Telephone: (868) 224-8067/224-8075.