COSTA RICA PRESIDENT TO FOCUS ON SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
Costa
Rican President Luis Guillermo Solis will discuss the future of sustainable
development and reflect on his nation’s success in adopting renewable energy
during a presidential address at the Abu Dhabi Sustainability Week (ADSW) 2017.
Costa
Rica achieved a historic milestone when its electricity grid ran solely on
renewable energy for more than 250 days in 2016, with a continuous 110-day
stretch from June 17 until October 6. This was the second time in two years
that the country had been powered by renewable energy continuously for at least
two months.
In a recorded address in advance of his attendance at ADSW,
President Solis said: “Abu Dhabi Sustainability Week is a true global forum
that connects cultures, geographies and philosophical concepts. This creates
strong synergies among political leaders, policy makers, business people and
society as a whole in order to address today’s challenges in renewable energy
and sustainable development. This is a key component of growth, the creation of
job opportunities and the improvement of living conditions for younger
generations.”
Costa Rica has long been an advocate of renewable energy and
environmental conservation, promoting their adoption in Latin America since the
establishment of its geothermal laws in December 1976. The laws, which
authorised the exploration of geothermal energy sources, were among the very
first to drive the need for clean energy in the region.
Renewable energy
sources supply 98 per cent of Costa Rica’s electricity demand, according to the
Instituto Costarricense de Electricidad, the country’s state-owned utilities
provider. More than 80 per cent of Costa Rica’s energy mix is comprised of
hydroelectric power, with geothermal, wind and solar energy making up the rest.
Geothermal
energy has the smallest greenhouse gas footprint per kilowatt of any power
generation technology, according to the Geothermal Energy Association. With a
string of hotspots, mountains and active volcanoes identified in Costa Rica,
and the greater Latin America region, geothermal can play a critical role in
delivering a clean, limitless and continual supply of energy in the country.
Home
to Central America’s largest hydroelectric power project, the 305.5-megawatt
(MW) Reventazón Dam, Costa Rica has a total renewable energy capacity of 2.5
gigawatts, according to the latest figures from the International Renewable
Energy Agency (IRENA), headquartered in Masdar City, Abu Dhabi.
Credit: Trade Arabia
News Service
COSTA RICA PRESIDENT TO FOCUS ON SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
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