Yahoo – AFP,
Marco SIBAJA, November 19, 2015
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The
Churchill Mamiche ice-cream parlour in Caldera, Puntarenas, 80 km
southwest of
San Jose is entirely powered --day and night-- by solar panels
(AFP Photo/Ezequiel
Becerra)
|
Caldera
(Costa Rica) (AFP) - At dusk one weekend on Costa Rica's tropical Pacific
coast, Mamiche is catering to a line of customers in front of the beachside
ice-cream stand he tends.
All looks
balmy and typical -- except for one little detail: the stand's refrigerator,
fan and lighting are not connected to the electricity network and there's no
noisy generator.
Instead,
solar panels on the roof are providing the power, another sign of an
eco-friendly push in Costa Rica that has made the country a model of
development and clean energy.
![]() |
Costa Rica
expects 97% of its energy
generation to come from renewable
sources this year
(AFP Photo/
Ezequiel Becerra)
|
"Fed
up with the noise and the pollution, we started thinking about putting up solar
panels to use the sun -- something we have a lot of here," he told AFP.
Land of
renewable energy
With an
electricity grid supplied by hydroelectric dams across rivers, from the heat of
its numerous volcanoes, and from wind and the sun, the small Central American
nation expects 97 percent of its energy generation to come from renewable
sources this year.
"Costa
Rica has renewable resources -- a sun that shines. The wind. It has hydro
resources. And all of that, along with geothermal and biomass energy, allows us
to have such a renewable energy network," Javier Orozco, planning chief at
the national energy company ICE, told AFP.
Next to
him, ICE's CEO, Carlos Obregon, said the ultimate aim was to eventually have
100 percent renewable energy, "but that requires us to find a balance
between different energy production, and that's not a question of a year, but
of many years."
Still, the
country caught the attention of the world ahead of December's COP21 UN
Convention on Climate Change in Paris by being totally reliant on renewable
energy for the first 75 days of this year, with no recourse to its thermal
plants using fossil fuels.
A report by
the environmental protection group WWF last year highlighted the country as a
Latin American leader in clean energy and predicted that in 2021 it would have
an entirely renewable energy supply.
![]() |
Owner Luis
Diego Vasquez installs more solar panels for the Churchill
Mamiche ice-cream
parlour (AFP Photo/Ezequiel Becerra)
|
Polluting
cars
But there
is another side to Costa Rica, one that tarnishes its image as an
environmentally conscientious nation: that of its congested roads, saturated
with old cars and buses, many spewing smoke.
According
to the Environment and Energy Ministry, the transport sector is responsible for
66 percent of hydrocarbon consumption and 54 percent of carbon-dioxide
emissions, one of the principal gases responsible for climate change.
Despite its
clean-energy network, Costa Rica produced 1.7 metric tons of CO2 per head of
population between 2011 and 2015, on a level with other countries at a similar
stage of development, such as Colombia or Uruguay, World Bank figures show.
Costa Rica
has nearly 1.4 million cars for a population of five million. RITEVE, its
roadworthiness inspection agency, says the average age of the vehicles is 16
years, which aggravates the emission problem.
In an
effort to address the issue, one lawmaker, Marcela Guerrero, of the governing
Citizen Action Party, last month presented a bill to lift import duties on
electric vehicles for five years and to encourage ownership of CO2
emission-free cars.
She told
AFP that she hoped to see 100,000 electric cars replace ones with conventional
engines.
"We
want users, with clear signals, to get behind a new pattern of consumption that
will lower emissions," she said.
![]() |
Wind
turbines of the National Power and Light Company in Santa Ana,
Costa Rica (AFP
Photo/Ezequiel Becerra)
|
Electric
train?
Another
initiative is to start up an urban electric train system in the most populated
center of the country, where the congested capital San Jose lies.
Although
considered crucial from transport and environmental perspectives, lawmakers
have made little headway in having the train project approved because of
funding discrepancies.
Guerrero
said she was confident a consensus allowing a vote would be reached by April
2016, and that the trains would be operational in the following five years.
The
question is whether Costa Rica can maintain its clean energy goal while
providing the sparks needed for electric transport.
Obregon is
convinced that ICE will be able to handle the increased demand by deepening
investment in non-conventional sources such as wind and solar power, which
currently play a marginal role in its mix.
"We
are preparing for a future where consumers are also (energy) generators,"
making contributions to the grid through private solar panels and the like, he
said.
If it goes
that way, Mamiche's little stand may end up selling not only ice, but fire.
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