Title: St.%20Kitts%20and%20Nevis%20Sustainable%20Energy%20Plan
1St. Kitts and Nevis Sustainable Energy Plan
- Initial Stakeholders Meeting
- June 13, 2006
2St. 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.
3Who Is GSEII?
- Global Sustainable Energy Islands Initiative
- Formed as an informal partnership in 2001 in
response to St. Lucias commitment to become a
sustainable energy demonstration country
- Partners
- OAS
- ESG
- The Climate Institute
- UNIDO
- UNF
- Partner countries
4What 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
5Why Should St. Kitts and Nevis Care about the
Energy Sector?
- High price of electricity Caused by
- total dependence on imported petroleum for
electricity generationhigh price of petroleum
(US70/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
6Goals 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)
7Defining 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
8Elements of a SEP
9Outline 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?)
10I. 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
11Summary of Generation Characteristics (July 2005)
 St. Kitts Nevis Unit
Parameter St. Kitts Electricity Department Nevis Electricity Company (NEVLEC) Â
Diesel units 7 7
Installed capacity 33.5 13.7 MW
Electric efficiency 40 35
Average load factor 0.73 0.74
Fuel type Gasoil (diesel fuel) Diesel fuel 2
Fuel cost 0.42 0.49 US/L
Electricity price 0.169 0.19 US/kWh
12(No Transcript)
13(No Transcript)
14Projections for Demand Growth St. Kitts
1 Source Generation Expansion Plan
(2005-2015), St. Kitts Electricity Department
(2005)
15Projections for Demand Growth - Nevis
16I. 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?
17II. 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)
18II. 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
19III. 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
20Likely 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
21Likely 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
22Likely 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)
23Likely 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)
24Likely 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
25Likely 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)
26IV. 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
27IV. 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)
28IV. 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
29IV. 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
30IV. Potential Actions to Achieve Targets
- Cross-Cutting Electricity Sector Issues
- Electricity system improvements
- Promote Climate Change/CDM strategy
31IV. 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
32V. 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
33Contact Information
- Mark Lambrides
- mlambrides_at_oas.org 1-202-458-6261
- Kevin de Cuba
- kdecuba_at_oas.org 1-202-458-
- Maria Rivera
- maria_at_energyandssecurity.com 1-703-
34Thank You!