Government seeks renewable energy plan similar to one drafted before 2019 election
The government is seeking a consultant to draft a plan to help the Virgin Islands transition to 100 percent renewable energy by 2050.
But such a plan was approved by the previous Cabinet shortly before the February 2019 general election, and VI officials aren’t saying why a new one is needed now.
In the aftermath of the 2017 hurricanes, the Colorado-based non-profit Rocky Mountain Institute — which in 2014 merged with Sir Richard Branson’s non-profit Carbon War Room — partnered with the government and the BVI Electricity Corporation to determine how to rebuild the territory’s electricity grid over time to be more resilient and environmentally friendly.
The result was the 68-page BVI Resilient National Energy Transition Strategy, which was funded by Sir Richard’s non-profit Virgin Unite and unnamed individual donors.
The plan, which was tabled in the House of Assembly in June 2019, draws upon comprehensive studies of the territory’s electricity system, forecasts the global energy market, and assesses the priorities of various stakeholders to illustrate how VI leaders could greatly increase renewable energy generation in the future.
Now, however, the Premier’s Office is seeking help drafting what appears to be a very similar strategy.
Expressions of interest
Last June, government issued a request for expressions of interest for a consultant to draft an “Energy Transition Plan” that would identify “strategies to achieve stated energy conservation and renewable energy goals … with an understanding of the regulatory context and conditions” in the territory.
Last month, the Cabinet followed up: During a March 17 meeting, members decided to invite four firms, each of which responded to the EOI request last June, to submit technical and financial proposals for the consulting services, according to a summary of the Cabinet meeting provided by the Cabinet Office.
But the stated goals of the new plan bear a close resemblance to what is included in the R-NETS strategy.
The 2020 EOI request, for instance, states that the new plan should “be structured in at least three phases to capture short-,medium- and long-term actions, recommendations and opportunities.”
Similar work was already undertaken by RMI.
In a section of its report titled “Action Plan,” the authors outline “specific immediate-, medium- and long-term investment projects that the BVI should pursue.”
2013 energy goals
Many of these projects were first proposed years before the R-NETS was drafted.In fact, the R-NETS was conceived as a means of enacting earlier goals laid out in the territory’s 2016 Energy Policy, which itself aims to hit a set of targets established in 2013.
These goals include generating 30 percent of the territory’s energy by renewable means by 2023; decreasing fossil fuel imports by 20 percent by 2021; reducing fossil-fuel inputs to electricity on Anegada by 80 percent by 2021; and ensuring that 50 percent of consumers use some sort of renewable energy technology or energy conservation measures.
Because progress toward these goals has been stymied repeatedly over the years, the territory continues to produce nearly all of its electricity by burning diesel fuel.
Last July, BVIEC officials promised change when they announced a $4.6 million contract for a solar field on Anegada designed to tick off the 2013 goal for reducing fossil fuel use on the sister island.
But construction has yet to start, and the chosen contractor, Maryland solar developer Rob Wallace Jr., has a history of allegations of fraud, broken contracts, refusal to pay his bills, and other misconduct sometimes associated with projects similar to the one he was chosen to build on Anegada.
Other similarities
The desired three-pronged structure of the planned Energy Transition Plan is not the only aspect of the new effort that echoes RMI’s renewable transition strategy.
Among other elements, the 2020 EOI request stated that the consultant should assess the “current regulatory framework for energy policy … and renewable energy in the BVI;” identify “energy conservation, renewable energy and energy storage opportunities;” calculate “the financial implications … and other impacts of developed strategies and recommendations;” and analyse “the potential greenhouse gas emission reductions that can be achieved through implementation of the plan.”
Many of these elements are present in the R-NETS strategy, which includes the results from detailed projections modeling the cost-effectiveness and emissions-reduction potential of six renewable development “scenarios.”
And after months of studying the territory’s electricity grid and capacity for renewable development, the strategy’s authors concluded that to make solar and other alternative technologies attractive on a large scale, the BVIEC must overhaul its renewable energy regulations.
“BVIEC should … examine innovative approaches to its current business model,” the R-NETS states.
As an example of one such innovation, the authors suggested that the BVIEC figure out a way to recoup “utility investments” in renewable energy infrastructure to then help residents install solar panels on the roofs of their homes.
The utility has been working toward that goal in recent months, though widespread use of solar technology on homes is not in effect.
Image: Pexels, Hoan Ngoc