Latest News

Cuba opens the first of 92 new solar parks to combat energy crisis

Cuba opens the first of 92 new solar parks to combat energy crisis

Cuban President Miguel Diaz-Canel opened the first of 92 Solar Parks on Friday, as part of an initiative backed by China to reduce the number of blackouts that can last for hours in the Caribbean Island nation.

The park in Havana is one of 55 that are expected to be online by this year. It will generate 1,200 megawatts.

Last year, the outdated power grid of this Communist-run nation collapsed multiple times. A severe fuel shortage made it impossible for smaller clusters to operate diesel-powered generators which typically backup the system.

Blackouts that lasted for years have weakened the economy, and prompted scattered protests by residents who are tired of the multi-faceted crisis which includes a scarcity of basic goods such as food and medicine.

The government is heavily promoting the parks as a partial answer to people's problems, which they blame primarily on U.S. sanction.

Diaz-Canel tweeted on Friday that "the recovery of the grid is a top priority, and this is its safest route."

Cuba's maximum demand is around 3,500MW. However, it fails to meet 1,500MW of this, leading to power outages.

Cuba and China agreed to boost solar energy in Cuba's grid in April, but neither government provided details on the financing.

Hua Xin attended the Havana solar park's inauguration. Foreign journalists were not allowed to attend the event.

Presently, less than 5% (or a little more) of Cuba's energy is derived from alternative sources. Cuba's 2030 goal is 24%. Marc Frank (reporting; Paul Simao, editing)

(source: Reuters)