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Helping the Virgin Islands Cut Fuel Use with Renewables

By Bill Scanlon, NREL
January 13, 2012   |   11 Comments

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11 Reader Comments
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Comment
1 of 11
Anonymous
January 14, 2012
So it will take ~13 years to reach a 3% solar target when electricity prices are already more than $0.40/kWh? It is hard to believe one cannot do much better than that!
Steven
Comment
2 of 11
January 14, 2012
Great question! How the hell can they ONLY add 3% solar, over 15 years, with electricity prices over 40 cents???

You can make those numbers work for solar without even trying. What are we missing???

I'm impressed with their enthusiasm, but have to seriously question whoever is guiding them from the tech side.
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3 of 11
January 15, 2012
I agree with the above seniments. I live In Brisbane, Australia. We are approx 27 degrees south of the equator. With a 3.5kw system on our roof we are net exporters of elctricity. We export enough power that just two of our systems would supply enough power for 3 homes.

The US Virgin islands are aprox 18 degrees north of the equator. The sun is much more intense there so a 3.5kw would probably generate enough for two homes. Having just 50% of homes fitted with such a system would cover all household power requirements during maximum generation periods. Now if the homes were also fitted with battery back ups for night usage, and times of lower production it would be a winner.
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4 of 11
January 15, 2012
I notice that there is no mention of wave power for the islands. A system using the power of the waves to generate electricity is a reliable source 24 hours a day. Also with 100 mw of solar pv, and 100 mw of wind turbines you can provide power to all the homes of the islands. This might cost the same as buying the real supply of 2.6 million barrels of oil . Make the big investment once and then the rest is almost free.
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5 of 11
January 17, 2012
The biggest obstacle for the USVI is the old, upreliable transmission grid which needs millions in upgrades to handle DG. USVI Water and Power Admin issued a 10 MW renewable RFP and even though EPC costs for racking and construciton are manageable, interconnection costs are not. Siemens has designed and proposed a trans-Caribbean submarine transmission system linking Puerto Rico, USVI and the British Virgin Islands that could eliminate some bottlenecks to deliver 'smart-grid' robustnuss and efficiencie in these islands subject to rolling blackouts and long hurrican induced outages. Any renewable energy source will need significant expenditure to upgrade the island's 12kVA distribution system before wide adoption. Another problem with solar in USVI is the small parcels and high cost of available land.

http://www.viwapa.vi/AboutUs/Projects/ProjectDetails/11-08-02/USVI-BVI-Puerto_Rico_Interconnection.aspx
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6 of 11
January 17, 2012
I am slightly surprised that there is no mention of integrating tidal and wave energy technologies into their mix of renewables. Especially so as the presence of hurricanes might prove that solar and wind, unless very well designed, were suboptimal. But then I have to admit that I am not personnally acquainted with the Virgin Islands and their weather.
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7 of 11
January 17, 2012
I am a solar sales and installer in the VI and I have electrical permits with final inspection requests almost a year old.
38% from conservation is not going to happen unless the stores that cater to crusie ships stop leaving thier doors open all day and air conditioning the street. The percentage of solar needs to be way higher.
While WAPA's CEO may SAY he supports solar road block after road block is put in the way.
The other thing that happens is the red tapee and expense of many of the programs makes then difficult or not cost effective to implement.
Installing Hydro would mean environmental lawsuits for decades
Comment
8 of 11
January 17, 2012
Ah. The wonders of bureaucracy. Good Luck with your solar PV installations, and getting them to think about energy saving. Here in UK we have many NIMBY organizations nevermind individuals e.g. a well placed landscape 'expert' who seriously stated that Scots Pine should only be allowed to grow in Scotland and definitely not on English moorland! The fact that it is a european-wide species (Pinus sylvestris) escaped her and she even refused to believe it when told. Perhaps this was topped by the body who insisted that a survey for Great Crested Newts be carried out before 4 wind turbines, of less than 100ft tall, could be approved by planning!

So great a need; so many people; and so much power lying under the jurisdiction of so few neurones!
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9 of 11
January 26, 2012
No need to worry about the energy costs at Virgin islands or any islands for that matter. At www.sustechinitiatives.com we provide the marine Hydro Power Technology which can be constructed to any coast without the need for fuel. The project costs are bare minimal for a given MW with lowest land & civil costs since no dams / barrages are needed. The plant is too simple in its construction with lowest construction/ Gestation periods of just 3 to 6 months.Lowest electricity costs 24 hours x 365days, base & peak load options, marked by mega power generation capacities due to very high head formation scope with optimum water use & recycling back to sea.Desalination, transport grids and more features.
Comment
10 of 11
January 26, 2012
Islands in the sun only looking forward to 3% solar ???????
Desalination and energy production can be mostly obtained by the intelligent and efficient use of solar. This is even more evident when the objective of 38% savings through efficiency is included
Comment
11 of 11
May 13, 2012
All of the Caribbean is held hostage by special interest groups that benefit from the status quo. Change comes slowly.
Chris Mason
http://caribbeanrenewable.blogspot.com/
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