Renewable energies potential in Jamaica

Jamaica has abundant renewable energy sources (RES), which have hardly been tapped in the past and could provide for large shares of the future energy requirements. In 2005, around 5% of the expected 4,020 GWh of electricity produced will be based on RES (wind and hydropower). With the new planned t...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Loy, Detlef, Coviello, Manlio
Formato: Texto
Idioma:English
Publicado: ECLAC 2005-06
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://hdl.handle.net/11362/4138
id RI-11362-4138
record_format dspace
spelling Loy, Detlef
Coviello, Manlio
German Agency for Technical Cooperation
NU. CEPAL
Jamaica. Ministry of Commerce, Science and Technology
2014-01-02T15:22:33Z
2014-01-02T15:22:33Z
2005-06
http://hdl.handle.net/11362/4138
LC/W.18
Includes bibliography
Jamaica has abundant renewable energy sources (RES), which have hardly been tapped in the past and could provide for large shares of the future energy requirements. In 2005, around 5% of the expected 4,020 GWh of electricity produced will be based on RES (wind and hydropower). With the new planned target of a share of 15% RES electricity by 2012, a combined renewable capacity of about 175 MW would need to be installed in that year. There is further wind potential on Jamaica, even if no exact figures can be given on the magnitude of the exploitable wind potential. Nonetheless, it seems realistic that within the next years three more wind farms of about 20 MW each could be erected. Several hydropower sites have been examined in the past with all but one being of minor scale. New hydropower plants can be economical under current conditions if generation costs do not exceed about 6 US-cents per kWh. One of the largest renewable energy potentials for electricity generation is to be found in the sugar processing industry. With the installation of new high-pressure boilers and improvements in the energy efficiency of the sugar plants, more than 220 GWh/year of excess electricity could be supplied to the public grid. Up to 10% of gasoline can be substituted by bioethanol or its derivate ETBE without modifications to the vehicle engines. Most favourable for bioethanol production in the case of Jamaica is the use of sugar cane. Currently solar water heaters cover only about 1% of the domestic market (private houses An estimated 75 to 100 GWh of electricity could be saved annually, if only the 45,000 residential homes with the highest electricity demand would use solar water heaters. In order to achieve the long-term RES goals, the existing potentials will need to be better identified and located, using on-site assessments and long-term measurements if appropriate. Such pre-feasibility studies will require the involvement of private investors at an early stage. To smooth administrative procedures and attract foreign investment, the establishment of a one-stop agency as central contact point is proposed. Financial and fiscal incentives GCT waiver or reduced duty taxes can lower the threshold for investments with high up-front costs.
86 páginas.
en
ECLAC
Documentos de Proyectos
18
Renewable energies potential in Jamaica
Texto
Documento Completo
Proyecto Promoción del Desarrollo Económico en América Latina y el Caribe, por medio de la Integración de Propuestas de Políticas Ambientales y Sociales GER/02/070
Disponible
Santiago
86 p. : tabls.
S2005017 E
LC/W.18
Santiago
DESARROLLO DE LOS RECURSOS ENERGETICOS
ENERGIA DE LA BIOMASA
ENERGIA EOLICA
ENERGIA HIDROELECTRICA
ENERGIA SOLAR
FUENTES DE ENERGIA RENOVABLES
NECESIDADES DE ENERGIA
POLITICA ENERGETICA
BIOMASS ENERGY
ENERGY POLICY
ENERGY REQUIREMENTS
ENERGY RESOURCES DEVELOPMENT
HYDROELECTRIC POWER
RENEWABLE ENERGY SOURCES
SOLAR ENERGY
WIND POWER
JAMAICA
JAMAICA
Documentos de proyectos e investigación
DESARROLLO INDUSTRIAL
ENERGÍA
DESARROLLO SOSTENIBLE
INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT
ENERGY
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
24583
DESARROLLO SOSTENIBLE Y ASENTAMIENTOS HUMANOS
RECURSOS NATURALES
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT AND HUMAN SETTLEMENTS
NATURAL RESOURCES
tablas
elec_str_mv Comisión Económica para América Latina y el Caribe(CEPAL)
collection Comisión Económica para América Latina y el Caribe(CEPAL)
title Renewable energies potential in Jamaica
spellingShingle Renewable energies potential in Jamaica
Loy, Detlef
Coviello, Manlio
DESARROLLO DE LOS RECURSOS ENERGETICOS
ENERGIA DE LA BIOMASA
ENERGIA EOLICA
ENERGIA HIDROELECTRICA
ENERGIA SOLAR
FUENTES DE ENERGIA RENOVABLES
NECESIDADES DE ENERGIA
POLITICA ENERGETICA
BIOMASS ENERGY
ENERGY POLICY
ENERGY REQUIREMENTS
ENERGY RESOURCES DEVELOPMENT
HYDROELECTRIC POWER
RENEWABLE ENERGY SOURCES
SOLAR ENERGY
WIND POWER
title_short Renewable energies potential in Jamaica
title_full Renewable energies potential in Jamaica
title_fullStr Renewable energies potential in Jamaica
title_full_unstemmed Renewable energies potential in Jamaica
title_sort renewable energies potential in jamaica
author Loy, Detlef
Coviello, Manlio
author_facet Loy, Detlef
Coviello, Manlio
topic DESARROLLO DE LOS RECURSOS ENERGETICOS
ENERGIA DE LA BIOMASA
ENERGIA EOLICA
ENERGIA HIDROELECTRICA
ENERGIA SOLAR
FUENTES DE ENERGIA RENOVABLES
NECESIDADES DE ENERGIA
POLITICA ENERGETICA
BIOMASS ENERGY
ENERGY POLICY
ENERGY REQUIREMENTS
ENERGY RESOURCES DEVELOPMENT
HYDROELECTRIC POWER
RENEWABLE ENERGY SOURCES
SOLAR ENERGY
WIND POWER
topic_facet DESARROLLO DE LOS RECURSOS ENERGETICOS
ENERGIA DE LA BIOMASA
ENERGIA EOLICA
ENERGIA HIDROELECTRICA
ENERGIA SOLAR
FUENTES DE ENERGIA RENOVABLES
NECESIDADES DE ENERGIA
POLITICA ENERGETICA
BIOMASS ENERGY
ENERGY POLICY
ENERGY REQUIREMENTS
ENERGY RESOURCES DEVELOPMENT
HYDROELECTRIC POWER
RENEWABLE ENERGY SOURCES
SOLAR ENERGY
WIND POWER
publishDate 2005-06
language English
publisher ECLAC
physical 86 páginas.
format Texto
description Jamaica has abundant renewable energy sources (RES), which have hardly been tapped in the past and could provide for large shares of the future energy requirements. In 2005, around 5% of the expected 4,020 GWh of electricity produced will be based on RES (wind and hydropower). With the new planned target of a share of 15% RES electricity by 2012, a combined renewable capacity of about 175 MW would need to be installed in that year. There is further wind potential on Jamaica, even if no exact figures can be given on the magnitude of the exploitable wind potential. Nonetheless, it seems realistic that within the next years three more wind farms of about 20 MW each could be erected. Several hydropower sites have been examined in the past with all but one being of minor scale. New hydropower plants can be economical under current conditions if generation costs do not exceed about 6 US-cents per kWh. One of the largest renewable energy potentials for electricity generation is to be found in the sugar processing industry. With the installation of new high-pressure boilers and improvements in the energy efficiency of the sugar plants, more than 220 GWh/year of excess electricity could be supplied to the public grid. Up to 10% of gasoline can be substituted by bioethanol or its derivate ETBE without modifications to the vehicle engines. Most favourable for bioethanol production in the case of Jamaica is the use of sugar cane. Currently solar water heaters cover only about 1% of the domestic market (private houses An estimated 75 to 100 GWh of electricity could be saved annually, if only the 45,000 residential homes with the highest electricity demand would use solar water heaters. In order to achieve the long-term RES goals, the existing potentials will need to be better identified and located, using on-site assessments and long-term measurements if appropriate. Such pre-feasibility studies will require the involvement of private investors at an early stage. To smooth administrative procedures and attract foreign investment, the establishment of a one-stop agency as central contact point is proposed. Financial and fiscal incentives GCT waiver or reduced duty taxes can lower the threshold for investments with high up-front costs.
url http://hdl.handle.net/11362/4138
work_keys_str_mv AT loydetlef renewableenergiespotentialinjamaica
AT coviellomanlio renewableenergiespotentialinjamaica
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