Caribbean Energy Champions to lead promotion of accelerated use of Renewable Energy Resources

Energy Ministers, decision‑makers from the public and private sectors and energy sector thought‑leaders and experts, last week accepted the challenge to become Energy Champions at the Caribbean Sustainable Energy Forum (CSEF‑VIII) held at the AC Hotel in Kingston, Jamaica, from November 7-9.

The Energy Champions agreed to lead the promotion of the Caribbean’s push towards the accelerated use of cost‑effective domestic renewable energy sources, coupled with energy efficiency and energy management measures to transition to resilient and secure economies whilst, simultaneously, contributing to the global decarbonisation goals.

On November 8, during the closing of the business sessions, Ms. Cherri-Ann Farquharson, Capacity Building and Gender Expert at the Caribbean Centre for Renewable Energy and Energy Efficiency (CCREEE), challenged delegates from the fifteen Caribbean countries in attendance to stand to demonstrate their commitment to leading the advocacy and actions for change upon their return to their respective jurisdictions.

“We have heard multiple times, first stated during the opening session of this Forum by the Chairman of the Executive Board of the CCREEE, Dr. James Fletcher, that we need energy champions …  So, I’m going to ask those who are willing and ready to accept this call to action to be an energy champion, to stand, demonstrating that commitment to be energy champions across the Caribbean,” said Ms. Farquharson.

Hon. Kerryne James, Grenada Minister of Climate Resilience, the Environment and Renewable Energy; and Hon. Konris Maynard, St. Kitts and Nevis Minister of Public Infrastructure, Energy and Utilities, Domestic Transport, Information, Communication and Technology, and Posts

All the delegates stood to signal their interest and commitment to serve as energy champions. Specifically, Hon. Melford Nicholas, Minister of Information, Communications Technologies, and Utilities and Energy in Antigua and Barbuda; Hon. Kerryne James, Minister of Climate Resilience, the Environment and Renewable Energy in Grenada; and Hon. Konris Maynard, Minister of Public Infrastructure, Energy and Utilities, Domestic Transport, Information, Communication and Technology, and Posts in St. Kitts and Nevis, committed to not only driving change within their respective countries, but to serving as change agents who would champion the push for accelerating the use of cost‑effective domestic renewable energy sources. The Ministers are from countries that are already among the global leaders in the promotion of renewable energy and the view is that their efforts could accelerate the collective ambition of CARICOM Member States to the energy transition whilst, simultaneously, contributing to global climate abatement goals.

The Forum was held under the theme: ‘RE-Powering Transport’. Transport is one of the world’s three largest energy end-use sectors and although energy use for transportation within the CARICOM region varies widely by country, in most instances, its share of total consumption within the individual jurisdictions greatly exceeds the global average. The view is that any effective regional approach toward the energy transition must address energy use within the transportation sector in a significant way; hence the theme and focus of the Forum.

Hon. Melford Nicholas, Minister of Information, Communications Technologies, and Utilities and Energy, Antigua and Barbuda

The CCREEE Chairman, Dr. James Fletcher, himself a former Minister of Energy and Climate Change in Saint Lucia, noted that “our Ministers provided synopses of what they are doing, and the Forum provided opportunity for them to talk to each, which they have been doing, so our countries can learn from the practices of each other and avoid mistakes, where possible”. Dr. Fletcher further stated that: “the commitment of a room full of delegates to serve as energy champions for the Region, if nothing else, is a major step in the right direction.”

Assistant Secretary-General, Economic Integration, Innovation and Development at the CARICOM Secretariat, Mr. Joseph Cox, reiterated to delegates that, despite the fact that all Member States, albeit at different stages, are already on the energy transition pathway, the Region still has a long way to go before the aspirations of attaining a rapid and just transition of the energy systems would be reached.

CARICOM Assistant Secretary-General, Economic Integration, Innovation and Development, Mr. Joseph Cox

He further stressed the need for countries to become creative in how they manage the transition. He pointed out that, in some countries, there is the realistic potential to become major suppliers of low‑carbon commodities within an emerging global market that is seeking to decouple from the fossil fuel and petrochemical industry, such that their energy sectors would not only serve as enablers for the traditional economic drivers, but as significant economic earners in their own right.

The Assistant Secretary‑General announced that a regional think‑tank would be established to complement and support the energy champions.  The think-tank is to provide technical inputs into the articulation of plans and actions, as well as the quantification of the investments, enabling environment, and requirements that are necessary for the energy transition.

Mr. Cox charged the CCREEE, in his capacity as a Member of its Executive Board, to move quickly to upscale its Project Preparation Facility, to increase its support to countries in the development of projects that are fitting and appropriate for an energy transition, not simply for cost‑savings and carbon abatement benefits, but also to strengthen their longer‑term sustainable development and resiliency strategies.

About The CCREEE

The Caribbean Centre for Renewable Energy and Energy Efficiency (CCREEE), headquartered in St. Michael, Barbados, was established by the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) Heads of Governments in April 2018 to transition the economies of the region to more sustainable energy use. The CCREEE is designed to directly address what is commonly referred to as an “implementation gap” within the regional sustainable energy landscape. It provides reliable and dedicated direct support to businesses, governments, and civil society actors by complementing and backstopping the individual and institutional capacities for energy-sector planning and sustainable-energy project implementation. Its work includes the development of modern, long-range plans for the energy sector and the transformation of innovative project ideas and concepts into “bankable” technical proposals and business plans. Through its dedicated, reliable, and deliberate actions, The CCREEE provides secure and resilient energy solutions to continually improve the competitiveness of businesses and the quality of the lives of CARICOM citizens.

For more information, visit www.ccreee.org; www.caricom.org

CSEF Media Contacts:

Dr. Pamala Proverbs, The CCREEE, 1-246-230-5979, communications@ccreee.org

Mrs. Michelle Nurse, CARICOM Secretariat, 1- 592-222-0001-6 Ext 2420 michelle.nurse@caricom.org 

Source: CARICOM TODAY

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