viernes, 2 de agosto de 2013

Cuba's 1st solar farm a step toward renewables

Posted on Thursday, 08.01.13



Cuba's 1st solar farm a step toward renewables

BY ANDREA RODRIGUEZ

ASSOCIATED PRESS



CANTARRANA, Cuba -- It's like a vision of the space age, carved out of

the jungle: Thousands of glassy panels surrounded by a lush canopy of

green stretch as far as the eye can see, reflecting the few clouds that

dot the sky on a scorching Caribbean morning.



Cuba's first solar farm opened this spring with little fanfare and no

prior announcement. It boasts 14,000 photovoltaic panels which in a

stroke more than doubled the country's capacity to harvest energy from

the sun.



The project, one of seven such farms in the works, shows a possible road

map to greater energy independence in cash-poor Cuba, where Communist

leaders are being forced to consider renewables to help keep the lights

on after four failed attempts to strike it rich with deep-water oil

drilling and the death of petro-benefactor Hugo Chavez.



"For us this is the future," said Ovel Concepcion, a director with

Hidroenergia, the state-run company tasked with building the solar park

190 miles (300 kilometers) east of Havana in the central province of

Cienfuegos.



"This is just like having an oil well," he told The Associated Press on

a recent tour of the facility.



Outside experts have chastised Cuba for missing an opportunity to

develop alternative energy sources; just 4 percent of its electricity

comes from renewables. That lags behind not only standard-setter Germany

(25 percent) but also comparable, developing Caribbean nations such as

the Dominican Republic (14 percent).



Located on rural land unfit for farming, the solar park at Cantarrana,

which translates roughly as "where frogs sing," is a tentative step

toward redressing that oversight.



Construction began at the end of last year, about the same time that

officials announced that a fourth exploratory offshore oil well drilled

in 2012 was a bust and the only rig in the world that can drill in the

deep waters off Cuba under U.S. embargo rules set sail with no return date.



In April, the solar farm came online and began contributing the first

solar power to the island's energy grid. Cuba already had about 9,000

panels in use, but all of them were for small-scale, isolated usage such

as powering rural hamlets, schools and hospitals.



The solar farm now generates enough electricity to power 780 homes and

had saved the equivalent of 145 tons of fossil fuels, or around 1,060

barrels of crude, through the end of July. Peak capacity is expected to

hit 2.6 megawatts when the final panels are in place in September.



That's just a drop in the energy bucket, of course.



Cuba gets about 92,000 barrels of highly subsidized oil per day from

Venezuela to meet about half its consumption needs, according to an

estimate by University of Texas energy analyst Jorge Pinon.



But hopes are high that solar can be a big winner in Cuba, which enjoys

direct sunlight year-round, allowing for consistent high yields of 5

kilowatt-hours per square meter of terrain.



"The possibility of solar energy on a large scale could contribute to

the island's future energy security," said Judith Cherni, an alternative

energy expert at the Imperial College London Center for Environmental

Policy who is familiar with Cuba's efforts.



Six other solar parks will come online in the coming months in Havana

and the regions of Camaguey, Guantanamo, the Isle of Youth, Santiago and

Villa Clara, though Concepcion did not specify their size.



Concepcion did not say how much the Cantarrana park cost, but said the

industry standard for a facility of its size is $3 million to $4

million. The government, which controls nearly all economic activity in

Cuba, financed construction, and the panels were manufactured at a

factory in the western province of Pinar del Rio.



Cantarrana is already saving the island around $800 a day and Concepcion

said it should pay for itself after a little more than a decade into its

25-year expected lifespan.



The project is a notable change in mindset for a country that relies on

imports for half its energy consumption and is vulnerable to the

political ebb and flow in other countries.



After the dissolution of the Eastern Bloc in the early 1990s, a loss of

Soviet subsidies plunged Cuba into a severe crisis. Blackouts sometimes

darkened Havana for 12 hours at a time.



Chavez's election in Venezuela in 1998 helped ease the crunch, but his

death this March made clear that Havana can hardly depend on the tap

staying open forever.



Chavez's handpicked successor, Nicolas Maduro, has vowed to maintain the

special relationship with Cuba. But he won election by a razor-thin

margin, and the Venezuelan opposition will almost certainly cut the Cuba

subsidy if it wins power.



Pinon, of the University of Texas, predicted it will be at least three

to five years before serious deep-water oil drilling can resume in Cuba.



Cuba's fuel uncertainty apparently prompted President Raul Castro to

issue a decree in December creating seven working groups to chart a

15-year plan to develop alternative energy including solar, wind,

biomass and others.



Cuba already has a handful of experimental wind farms and some small,

isolated hydroelectric facilities, though experts say Cuba's shallow

rivers are not ideal for large-scale power generation. The island has

had the most success burning biomass from sugarcane, but harvests have

fallen in recent years.



According to a government report from May, the island hopes to get 10

percent of its electricity from renewables by 2030.



"The reality is that cheap, abundant oil is over, and we have to turn

toward these technologies," said Vicente Estrada Cajigal, a specialist

on regional alternative energy initiatives and the former president of

Mexico's National Association for Solar Energy. "That treasure in the

Gulf (of Mexico), I have my doubts."



Estrada Cajigal said the cost of solar panels has fallen by 80 percent

in recent years, making it an ever more attractive option.



But other experts were cautious about how much photovoltaic energy can

contribute to the island.



Mexican energy consultant Francisco Acosta said that the shaky Cuban

economy's intricate ties to fossil fuels are not easily undone, and the

country has no choice but to continue to rely heavily on petroleum and

derivatives.



Solar "is a good idea, but to a certain point. ... In a country like

Cuba, stable energy is that which comes from hydrocarbons," Acosta said.



Cherni said unanswered questions remain about how Cuba will fund its

alternative energy ambitions. But she said the island's goal for 2030

seems about right, given that more-developed nations with greater

resources are committing to 15 or 20 percent from renewables by 2020.



"So 10 percent is a good start," Cherni said.



Andrea Rodriguez on Twitter: www.twitter.com/ARodriguezAP



Source: "CANTARRANA, Cuba: Cuba's 1st solar farm a step toward

renewables - Technology - MiamiHerald.com" -

http://www.miamiherald.com/2013/08/01/v-fullstory/3536302/cubas-1st-solar-farm-a-step-toward.html

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