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Renewable energy in Costa Rica

Renewable energy in Costa Rica supplied about 98.1% of the electrical energy output for the entire nation in 2016.[1] Fossil fuel energy consumption (% of total energy) in Costa Rica was 49.48 as of 2014,[2] with demand for oil increasing in recent years.[3] In 2014, 99% of its electrical energy was derived from renewable energy sources, about 80% of which from hydroelectric power.[4] For the first 75 days of 2015, 100% of its electrical energy was derived from renewable energy sources[5] and in mid 2016 that feat was accomplished for 110 consecutive days despite suboptimal weather conditions.[6]

Cachi Hydroelectric Plant, Cachi, Province of Cartago, Costa Rica

The 1948 elimination of the military of Costa Rica freed up millions of dollars from the government defense budget which are now invested in social programs and renewable energy generation.[1] As president of Costa Rica in 1948, José Figueres announced that the nation's former military budget would be refocused specifically in healthcare, education, and environmental protection.[7]

Costa Rica has a geographic advantage over others in that its high concentration per capita of rivers, dams, and volcanoes allows for a high renewable energy output. In addition, Costa Rica is the fourth highest nation in terms of rainfall per capita: it receives an average of 2,926 mm of precipitation per year.[8] As a smaller nation with a population of only 5 million and no major industry, the need for strong energy infrastructure is less than for larger countries of higher population density. While Costa Rica's largest source of energy is hydroelectricity, other sources include geothermal energy, biomass, solar power, and wind power.[4]

Energy consumption in Costa Rica edit

The commercial consumption of energy in Costa Rica has tripled from 1980 to 2009. The electricity consumption has increased by 4.2 times due to a high level of electrification.[9] According to the World Bank, 99.5%[10] of the country's population has access to electricity. Meanwhile, fossil fuel's consumption has increased by 2.4 times, caused by a significant growth of the number of motor vehicles.

The average yearly growing of hydrocarbons consumption in the last 20 years has been about 4.7% and electricity of 5.3%. At this rate, demand of electricity will double in 13 years and hydrocarbons in 15 years. The dependency of Costa Rica for fossil fuels reached in 2009 the 64% of commercial energy while electricity 22%. The rest of the basket consumption is completed by biomass (12%) and other energy products (2%). According with the World Bank, as of 2013, the energy use per capita of Costa Rica was 1029 kg[11] of oil equivalent and the electric power consumption per capita 1955 kWh.[12]

Sources edit

Costa Rica electricity generation by source (2019)[13]

  Hydropower (67.5%)
  Wind (17%)
  Geothermal (13.5%)
  Biomass and solar (0.84%)
  Non-renewables (1.16%)

Hydroelectricity edit

Costa Rica receives about 65%[14] of its energy from hydroelectric plants alone due to its extreme amounts of rainfall and multiple rivers.[15] As the largest source of energy, hydropower represents the most important source of energy in the country, but after inauguration of the Reventazon Dam, the only big hydro project remaining in the planning stage by the Instituto Costarricense de Electricidad (Costa Rican Institute of Electricity) is the El Diquís Hydroelectric Project, which has been suffering significant delays[16] due to pending environmental studies and the indigenous consultation that the state-owned company should conduct in the framework of the United Nations procedures.

Dams

Costa Rica's largest dams include The Lake Arenal Dam, Lake Cachi Dam, the Rio Macho Dam, the Pirrís Dam, the Reventazón Dam and the proposed El Diquís Hydroelectric Project. The Lake Arenal Dam was built in 1979 as the first dam intended solely for hydroelectric power usage. It is located on Lake Arenal next to the famous Arenal Volcano, one of the major tourist attractions in Costa Rica. At about 33 square miles, Lake Arenal provides enough electricity to power 12% of the country.[17] The Lake Cachi, Rio Macho, and Pirrís Dams are all powered by the Rio Reventazón (Reventazón River) and its tributaries.

 
Pirrís Dam under construction in 2011 by the Costa Rican Institute of Electricity (ICE)

The Cachi dam is situated on an artificial lake that was built in the 1970s and produces enough energy to power about 330,000 homes in Costa Rica. It also controls floods and provides recreational activities in the lake. Upstream of Cachi, the Rio Macho hydroelectric power plant has been operating since 1963 to provide hydroelectric power for central Costa Rica.[18] On the downstream, the Pirrís dam is one of the largest dams in Costa Rica and has the potential to power 160,000 homes. It also employs 3,000 Costa Ricans and provides drinking water to 40% of the metropolitan city area. The El Diquís Hydroelectric Project is a proposed hydroelectric system that Costa Rica plans to build as one of the largest Central American hydroelectric plant, located in the Southern Pacific area of the country and is intended to provide the nation with 631MW, enough energy to reach at least one million consumers. The recently opened Reventazón Dam, the current largest hydroelectric project of Central America is located on the Reventazón River, with a generation contribution of 305.5MW to the National Electric System, enough for providing electricity to more than 500,000 families.[19][20]

Geothermal power edit

Geothermal power is a natural energy source that provides subterranean heat and power as a byproduct of volcanic energy. Costa Rica has six currently active volcanoes and dozens of inactive volcanoes.[21] Unlike many other forms of renewable energy, geothermal can be continuously generated and is not dependent on weather. Geothermal energy contributes to about 15% of the energy in the country.[22]

Plants

The North Volcanic Mountain Ridge in Guanacaste is the region of Costa Rica with the most potential for geothermal power generation. Volcanoes in the region include Miravalles, Rincón de la Vieja, and Tenorio.

The Miravalles Geothermal Field, opened in 1994, contains five plants and results in the production of 14% of the National Electric System's power capacity, or about 163 MW.[23] The Pailas Geothermal Power Plant, established in July 2011, produces a total of 55MW[24] and is located just outside Rincón de la Vieja National Park. Rincón de la Vieja is a 600,000 year old volcano and the largest in the northwestern region of Costa Rica. In 2014, Costa Rica's government approved legislation for a $958 million geothermal project in the region to offset the country's reliance on hydropower.[25]

Wind power edit

 
Tejona wind farm, Lake Arenal, Costa Rica

While Costa Rica is not known specifically for its wind power, it was the first country in Latin America, starting in 1996, to harness this resource.[26] There have been a few different wind energy projects developed in the past decade. In March 2015, The Costa Rican Institute of Electricity stated that they plan on doubling the installed wind capacity in the nation by 2017.[27] As of 2011, only 2.1% of energy produced in the nation came from wind power.[28]

Wind Power is primarily used in Costa Rica during the months of December to March, or the dry season. During this period, there is a general decreased rainfall in the nation and hydropower output decreases.

Costa Rica finished 2015 with an additional 59 MW of power generation in wind energy, after the inauguration of the Orosi plant (50 MW) in October and “Vientos del Oeste” project (9 MW). As such, the wind power total capacity in the country is planned to grow from 194 MW in 2015 to 393 MW by 2017, an increase that would represent approximately 10.5% of total electricity production.[29]

Between 1996 and 1999 the first three private wind power plants began operation and in 2002 Tejona plant, built by the Instituto Costarricense de Electricidad. Later, the following plants were opened: Guanacaste (private 2009), Los Santos Wind Farm (built by the public cooperative Coopesantos in 2011 in the heart of Los Santos region, in San José), the “Valle Central” (built by the Compañía Nacional de Fuerza y Luz, or CNFL, a Grupo ICE subsidiary in 2011) and “Chiripa” (private, 2015).

In addition, the construction of five private plants during 2016 (Altamira, Campos Azules, Mogote, Vientos de la Perla y Vientos de Miramar) is planned, as well as another by the Compañía Nacional de Fuerza y Luz in 2017 (Ventus Project).

Farms

Currently, there are nine large wind farms operating in Costa Rica. The Tejona Wind Power Project (TWPP) is a 19.8 MW project, fully operational since 2003, that consists of thirty wind turbines. Most recently, Tila Wind, an even larger 20-MW farm, opened in 2015. Three of the remaining eight are owned by ICE and Compania Nacional de Fuerza y Luz SA (CNFL) and CoopeSantos RL. The remaining five are privately owned, and nearly all of the wind power plants are in the province of Guanacaste.[27]

Solar power edit

 
Solar potential of Costa Rica

Like wind power, solar power is another newer energy source in the country. The first solar power projects in the country were established in 1978 by just a few researchers from public universities at the Solar Power Laboratory at the National University. Though still on a smaller scale and mostly privately owned, plans for larger more commercial projects are beginning to break through.[30]

Despite the country has a privileged position near the equator that, combined with the sunny weather during the year, made a solar power potential of more than 144 million MWh/year,[31] solar energy in Costa Rica is in its early stages, and is even falling shorter than the rest of its Central American neighbors. According with an Instituto Costarricense de Electricidad (ICE) study in 2006, the national photovoltaic potential of electric generation for the projected population for 2015 is 222,000 MWh/year.[32]

In 2012, Costa Rica inaugurated the Miravalles Solar Park on the hillside of the Miravalles Volcano. At that time, it was the first of its kind in Costa Rica and the largest solar project in Central America.[33] It was built with the help of the Japanese International Cooperation Agency (JICA). The project's totaling was $11.5 million ($10 million from JICA and $1.5 million from ICE[34]). This plant of 1MW only represents 0.03% of all the capacity installed in the country of 2872 MW.

In 2013, China and Costa Rica signed agreements of US$30 million for financing the installation of 50 thousand solar panels, including a power plant of 10 MW.[35] In addition, in 2014, ICE announced a pilot program for solar energy use in housing that aimed to reach 600,000 clients,[36] but in 2015, the institution ended the plan arguing that the maximum capacity was already reached, rising criticism from the solar energy distributed generation sector. According with ACESOLAR,[37] more than 1000 jobs were at risk for such a decision.

Differences of bureaucracy procedures and technical aspects related to the official national norm “Planeación, Operación y Acceso al Sistema Eléctrico Nacional” (POASEN, in Spanish) on introducing distributed generation have been occurring and causing delays[38][39] in its implementation through the last years among the main actors of the solar sector: the Ministry of Environment and Energy (MINAE), the Autoridad Reguladora de Servicios Públicos (ARESEP, in Spanish, a public entity that fixes prices and standards on public services), the electricity agencies of the country and the private companies that supply solar panels. One of the main discrepancies between MINAE and ARESEP was the legal nature of net metering, being solved by the Attorney General of the Republic (Procuraduría General de la República, in Spanish) in June 2015.[40] The final resolution stated that distributed generation for self-consumption is not considered a public service in Costa Rica. In October 2015, the government finally published[41] the required regulatory framework that entered into operation in April 2016.

By 2013, countries like Guatemala or Honduras have 85 MW and 388 MW of solar power capacity installed respectively, and Nicaragua and Panama are also ahead of Costa Rica with 1.4 MW and 42.7 MW, according with a report[42] released in July 2016 by the Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (CEPAL, in Spanish). ICE's position is that the maximum capacity that could be allowed in the National Electric System is 60 MW, distributed in plants of no more than 5 MW across the territory.[43] However, the institution is not reporting to develop more solar projects in the next 10 years in their expansion plan.

Biomass edit

As of 2011, only 0.25% of energy produced in Costa Rica came from biomass. The Jorge Manuel Dengo Obregon National Development Plan proposes the development of sustainable biomass for energy. Currently, biomass is primarily used for cooking and heating kitchen appliances to reduce the reliance on petroleum in the household.[28]

Energy organizations edit

Ministry of Environment and Energy edit

The Ministry of Environment and Energy of Costa Rica (MINAE, in English), is the governmental institution responsible of the management of the resources of Costa Rica in the environmental and energy field. The president of Costa Rica, Luis Guillermo Solis Rivera, appointed[44] engineer Irene Cañaz Díaz – a former consultant of the Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit - as Vice-minister of Energy in May 2014. According with the Ministry's goals, the energy agenda of Costa Rica aims to generate a more rational and efficient use of energy resources, reduce the dependency to international markets and prepare the country to face climate change and oil depletion.[45] The Viceministry of Energy has three general departments: Sectoral Energy, Hydrocarbons and Transportation and Fuels Marketing.

Sectoral Energy Department edit

The Sectoral Energy Department (Dirección Sectorial de Energía, or DSE in Spanish) is responsible to create and promote the integral energy planning, using policies and strategic actions for guaranteeing the supply and quality of energy of Costa Rica. Among the objectives of the DSE, they are responsible[46] of creating the National Energy Plan taking into account the National Development Plan of Costa Rica, as well as the demands of the Ministry of Environment and Energy.

Costa Rican Institute of Electricity (ICE) edit

The Costa Rican Institute of Electricity (Spanish: Instituto Costarricense de Electricidad, ICE) was created on April 8, 1949[47] as an autonomous state-owned institution, as a way to solve the issues of electric energy availability that the country was faced during the 1940s. Since then, the ICE has been executing the electrical development of Costa Rica. In the last years, the institution has evolved as a corporation (Grupo ICE) clustering other public companies that include “Radiográfica Costarricense” (RACSA) and the National Company of Power and Illumination (Compañía Nacional de Fuerza y Luz, CNFL).

“Grupo ICE” has used as primary source the hydroelectricity for developing its infrastructure, but it has also built (and is currently building) several geothermal, wind and solar energy projects. It has more than 15,000[48] workers and has customer service offices in the whole country. Although the first large-scale hydroelectric station began to function at the beginning of the 1900s, large-scale hydroelectric power and electricity did not begin to be developed until the formation of Grupo ICE.[49]

Costa Rican Petroleum Refinery (RECOPE S.A.) edit

The Costa Rican Petroleum Refinery (Refinadora Costarricense de Petróleo, RECOPE in Spanish) is a state-owned institution, considered the biggest company in Central America. Since its creation in 1963 (and nationalized in 1974), RECOPE focuses its operations on import and distribution of fossil fuels in Costa Rica.[50]

In the research field, RECOPE has an experimental plant of biodiesel and through internships and agreements, works with public universities of Costa Rica and research centers in the developing of alternative fuels like biofuels, natural gas and hydrogen.

Hydrogen research edit

In 2011, the board of directors of RECOPE signed a partnership with Ad Astra Rocket Company, an American rocket propulsion company with facilities in Costa Rica, to jointly research hydrogen technologies for the transport sector.[51]

The project comprehends three phases: phase A (focused in the development of a feasibility study and to generate capacities for designing a station of compression and storage of hydrogen, delivered in 2012); phase B (designing and implementation of the storage system, delivered in 2013) and phase C (development of the integrated and autonomous system of energy supply from hydrogen).

The research work has been stranded since 2014, when the new administration of RECOPE decided to not continue with the initiative arguing doubts about the legal authority of RECOPE to invest in clean energy. In March 2015, the CEO of Ad Astra Rocket Company and former Costa Rican-American astronaut, Dr. Franklin Chang Diaz, announced the end of relations[52] with RECOPE due their lack of definition and the delays the project was suffering. The announcement was followed by harsh criticism of the population and national media against RECOPE's board of directors as well as other governmental institutions involved in the decision.[53][54]

ACOPE edit

Asociación Costarricense de Productores de Energía (ACOPE) was founded in 1989 and represents more than 40 private hydroelectric, wind, and biomass units generating in the country. Though there are a few large private energy companies in Costa Rica, most primarily generate power to sell to ICE.

Consorcio Nacional de Empresas de Electrificación de Costa Rica (CONELECTRICAS R.L.) edit

Consorcio Nacional de Empresas de Electrificacion de Costa Rica (Conelectricas), formed in 1989, is a union that aims to develop hydroelectric projects. The union consists of four smaller agencies: Coopeguanacaste, R.L, Coope Alfaro Ruiz, R.L, Coopelesca, R.L, and Coopesantos, R.L. Together, these four cooperatives provide electricity to around 500,000 people, or 22% of the country.[28]

This consortium operates the San Lorenzo Hydroelectric Center and the Sigifredo Solís Solís Hydroelectric Center, both in San Ramón.[55]

Costa Rican Association of Solar Energy (ACESOLAR) edit

The Asociación Costarricense de Energía Solar (ACESOLAR, in Spanish)[56] is a NGO which its main objective is to promote the use and development of solar energy in the country. The organization collaborate with the private and public representatives related to the sector.

2017: 300 days of renewable energy edit

At the start of January 2017, Costa Rica's 4.9 million-person population ran entirely on renewable energy power for 75 days straight. This was a record-breaking achievement in that Costa Rica was the first nation to power itself completely clean of fossil fuels for this long a timeframe. This summer was an exceptionally rainy one for Costa Rica: while usually the dry season, the sheer amount of power provided from an unusually high amount of precipitation led to a higher than usual amount of hydroelectricity generated.[15]

Carbon neutrality edit

In 2007, the administration of former president of Costa Rica Oscar Arias Sánchez announced the national goal to become Costa Rica the second carbon neutral country in the world (first one was Bhutan) by 2021, the same year when the country will celebrate 200 years of independence from Spain. The proposal was officially presented to the United Nations Framework for Climate Change Convention (UNFCCC) in 2010. The initiative has been kept[57] by the next administrations of President Laura Chinchilla Miranda and Luis Guillermo Solís Rivera and aims to evolve the national economy's carbon footprint to no more than 1 ton of CO2 emissions per capita.

Costa Rica aims to generate 100% carbon neutral electricity by 2021.[49] Apart from relying 99% on renewable (low carbon) electricity, carbon neutrality is to be achieved by resort to electric and hybrid transportation.[58] In addition, the Costa Rican government is also beginning to offset the country's carbon dioxide emissions with new budgeting, laws, and incentives, including measures to promote biofuels, hybrid vehicles, and clean energy. Another way of offsetting emissions will be a "C-Neutral" levy which will certify that ecotourism and other industrial practices are offsetting their carbon emissions. At $10 per one ton of carbon, the money will fund conservation, reforestation, and research.[59]

The proposal requires the substitution of low emission technologies for fossil hydrocarbon (FHC) energy in the country and the transformation of the transport subsector – which represents 66% of national FHC emissions and 54%[60] of the total CO2 emissions – into lower carbon footprint technologies such as electric vehicles, biofuels, hybrid cars and hydrogen vehicles, as well as the promotion among the population of greater reliance on the public transport system. 41% of the total CO2 emissions in the transport subsector come from particular vehicles, according to the government. These measures could allow the country to save between US$1.5 and $2 billion per year.[61] In order to achieve the goal, Costa Rica also needs to improve its waste management practices and agriculture methods as these account for significant proportions of national GHG emissions.

In recent years, the private sector has been actively involved in adoption of energy efficiency policies and developing low carbon certification. The National Institute of Technical Norms of Costa Rica (INTECO, in Spanish) published the regulations that private companies should follow to get carbon neutral certification.

Regulatory framework edit

The energy policy of the current administration is guided by the concept of energy sustainability with low emissions. The “VII Plan Nacional de Energía 2015-2030”[62] was designed according to the priorities of the National Development Plan 2015-2018 and the government plan of President Luis Guillermo Solís Rivera.

The plan is based in five main objectives that are: 1) introducing changes in the National Power System for increasing energy efficiency, savings and improve the management of electricity demand; 2) encouraging the development of distributed generation and self-consumption electricity; 3) to update the law and institutional framework specialized in promoting energy efficiency; 4) to improve the calculation methods of electricity tariffs and 5) to raise the management efficiency of public entities of the electricity sector.

Regarding the transport sector, the national energy plan is also including as its main goals to promote “cleaner systems and clients of collective transport for hence mitigate the effects of global warming as well as encouraging the use of alternative fuels in the transport system, reducing the dependency of hydrocarbons, the emission of polluting gases and improve the regulations for importing new and used vehicles in order to promote energy efficiency and polluting reduction”.

In addition, the National Development Plan of Costa Rica 2015-2018[63] establish the sectoral objectives for the energy policy: 1) “To promote actions facing global climate change through citizens’ participation, technological change, innovation processes, research and knowledge for ensuring the welfare, human security and competitiveness of the country” and 2) “supply energy demand of the country using an energy matrix that ensure an optimal and continuous supply of electricity and fuels, promoting an efficient use of energy for keeping and improve the competitiveness of the country”.

Utility private scale projects[64] are regulated by the Law 7200[65] (“Ley que Autoriza la Generación Eléctrica Autónoma o Paralela”, in Spanish), approved by the Legislative Assembly of Costa Rica in 1990. The private sector provides to Instituto Costarricense de Electricidad (ICE) nearly a quarter of the electricity generation capacity available and 10% of generated. However, there is still debate about how much private participation should be in the market.

By 2013, approximately 14.5% of the total generation in the country was provided by private companies and 23% of installed capacity in the National Power System, according with ICE.[66] The Law 7200 establishes that ICE has two ways to buy private electric generation. In Chapter I it is defined the regimen of autonomous or parallel generation, that regulates the BOO (Build, Own and Operate) contracts. Article 7 of the law states that the “ICE will be able to declare eligible a project for the use of a plant of limited capacity, meanwhile the power, with the exception of parallel generation, doesn’t represent more than 15% of the collective power of electric plants that constitutes the National Power System”.

In Chapter II it is defined the competitive regimen that regulates the BOT (Build, Operate and Transfer) contracts. Article 20 allows the ICE to “buy electric energy from private companies up to an additional 15% of the limit specified in Article 7. This authorization is entitled for acquiring energy from hydro, geothermal, wind and any other non-conventional source, in bundles equal or smaller than 50,000 kW of maximum power (added by Law 7508 on May 9, 1995)”. By 2014, ICE had 25 BOO contracts and 9 BOT contracts.

Despite political pressure to increase the participation of private companies and opening the market for reducing the costs of electricity, ICE is opposing the idea arguing their expansion plan is already solving the demand for 20 years ahead and the costs of the generation matrix are the lowest. According to ICE,[67] until 2020 the country will need 850 MW of power generation, and all this demand is already considered with the current on-going projects.

Although the country has abundant renewable energy resources, more than 25% of Costa Rican territory has been entitled as natural protected land, reducing and limiting the possibility to explore and exploit these renewable sources, like geothermal energy in national parks.[68]

In 2016, continuous discussions in the Legislative Assembly of Costa Rica have been occurring for a reform that would allow the ICE to exploit geothermal energy in protected areas. The Project 19.233 was presented by the former candidate to the Presidency of the Republic and incumbent Congress Representative, Ottón Solís from the Citizen Action Party. In turn, the ICE would compensate land used for the projects with land outside the parks. The bill addresses concerns over geothermal electricity generation in Rincón de la Vieja, Tenorio, and Arenal Volcano national parks.[69] This initiative has raising concerns from some activists that claim the environmental controls led in the country by the National Technical Bureau of Environment (Secretaría Técnica Nacional del Ambiente, SETENA in Spanish) are weak. The activists also argue the process of exploration for geothermal energy is similar than those used in oil and mining.[70]

However, in June 2015, the Minister of Environment and Energy, Edgar Gutierrez Espeleta, alleged MINAE is not currently planning to exploit geothermal energy in national parks and will postpone the decision until further research about its impact in the country and its biodiversity is made.[71]

Conflicts edit

Transportation edit

The biggest obstacle to carbon neutrality is the transportation sector. Vehicles consume 70% of the petroleum consumed in the nation, which is 40% of the total carbon emissions. The primary mode of public transportation is diesel-powered buses. More than 50% of Costa Rica's personal passenger cars are over 20 years old with high polluting engines, though the government is beginning to propose new hybrid and plug-in electric vehicle initiatives. The existing rail network is limited to the Central Valley and not electrified. Other proposed solutions include an upgrade of the rail network (including electrification), gondolas, and trolleys in the metropolitan Costa Rican Central Valley.[72]

Reliability edit

Though hydroelectricity from dams is a high-density and high-power energy source, it is also highly dependent on weather conditions. Hydropower is reliant on rainfall and is therefore not the most reliable form of energy during seasons of drought. After an extreme season of drought in 2014, Costa Rica was forced to resort to diesel generators since sufficient rainfall was unavailable to power any of the hydroelectric dams.[1]

Solar is an energy source that is highly dependent on weather conditions and has therefore been used on a much smaller scale than hydroelectric, wind and geothermal energy.[15]

Environmental and social impact edit

One main barrier to extensive geothermal power is the abundance of national parks and protected areas that prevent excavation near many of Costa Rican's volcanoes. For example, though Rincon de la Vieja has the potential to fuel a high density of geothermal energy, Costa Rican law currently prohibits the extraction of resources inside national parks in order to preserve the land.[23] Hydroelectric dams have also been criticized for their effects on the surrounding ecosystems. Controversy around hydroelectric dam usage stems from both environmental impact on a surrounding region and from human displacement of land. Hydroelectric dams have been equated to interference in fish migration patterns, ecosystem disrupt, interference in water quality, and land degradation from flooding the land.[73]

The Pirrís dam especially caused much controversy regarding the displacement of people who lived in the area, especially in relation to the indigenous peoples of Costa Rica. Though dams provide job opportunities for locals, they also displace large populations of humans.[18]

Controversy with El Diquís Hydroelectric Project edit

The El Diquís Hydroelectric Project has been one of the most important projects for the Instituto Costarricense de Electricidad, it will be the biggest hydropower dam of the Central American region and it is designed to provide stability and reliability to the Costa Rican electricity generation grid. Diquís will produce 655 MW, for a total of 3050 MW. Its reservoir will extent to an area of approximately 7.407 ha (900 ha of it in indigenous protected lands) and its tunnel of 9 m diameter will have more than 11 km length. The project will require to move seven communities from the area, that is more than a thousand families. The project total expected cost is around US$2 billion.[74]

The size of the project and its impact on the local population have raised concerns throughout the years. Among the actions deployed by the activists against the project are lawsuits for environmental damages, protests and communications breaks with the government and Grupo ICE's authorities.[75] The Diquís's reservoir is projected to flood 10% of the China Kichá territory (104 ha) and 8% of Térraba land (726 ha).[76]

Diquís is currently in the pre-investment phase but its impact over culture, environment and life in general for the indigenous made involved the United Nations Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination (CERD) as a key actor since 2011,[77] after a letter sent by representatives of the indigenous Térraba community. In their notification letter, CERD reminded to Costa Rica the obligations of consult and participation to all indigenous communities that would be affected by the project. The country replied to the U.N. informing the status of the project and highlighting that the construction has not initiated yet.

In July 2015, a US$200 million lawsuit against ICE and the Government of Costa Rica set by one of the associations representing the indigenous communities, alleging presumed environmental damage during the preliminary exploration works, was dismissed[78] by a justice court.

In October 2016, after a failed meeting with authorities of the Government of Costa Rica led by the Vice-minister of the Presidency Ana Gabriel Zuñiga, a group of indigenous representatives and local leaders confirmed their non-negotiable position against the project.[79] The Government argued that they are currently working in a decree to facilitate the consultation process which should be released by January 2017.

In November 2016, the Constitutional Court of Costa Rica declared unconstitutional[80] the Article 8 of the presidential decree that establish that the ICE is allowed to exploit materials for the dam, the powerhouse and collateral works in the areas where indigenous communities are located.

On November 2, 2018, ICE indefinitely suspended the Diquís project.[81]

See also edit

References edit

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Panela Pancha Panqueque Tortilla (Figura importante de gobierno) 1987: "Costa Rica debe mejorar en el biomass porque eso afecta mucho al país."

renewable, energy, costa, rica, supplied, about, electrical, energy, output, entire, nation, 2016, fossil, fuel, energy, consumption, total, energy, costa, rica, 2014, with, demand, increasing, recent, years, 2014, electrical, energy, derived, from, renewable,. Renewable energy in Costa Rica supplied about 98 1 of the electrical energy output for the entire nation in 2016 1 Fossil fuel energy consumption of total energy in Costa Rica was 49 48 as of 2014 2 with demand for oil increasing in recent years 3 In 2014 99 of its electrical energy was derived from renewable energy sources about 80 of which from hydroelectric power 4 For the first 75 days of 2015 100 of its electrical energy was derived from renewable energy sources 5 and in mid 2016 that feat was accomplished for 110 consecutive days despite suboptimal weather conditions 6 Cachi Hydroelectric Plant Cachi Province of Cartago Costa RicaThe 1948 elimination of the military of Costa Rica freed up millions of dollars from the government defense budget which are now invested in social programs and renewable energy generation 1 As president of Costa Rica in 1948 Jose Figueres announced that the nation s former military budget would be refocused specifically in healthcare education and environmental protection 7 Costa Rica has a geographic advantage over others in that its high concentration per capita of rivers dams and volcanoes allows for a high renewable energy output In addition Costa Rica is the fourth highest nation in terms of rainfall per capita it receives an average of 2 926 mm of precipitation per year 8 As a smaller nation with a population of only 5 million and no major industry the need for strong energy infrastructure is less than for larger countries of higher population density While Costa Rica s largest source of energy is hydroelectricity other sources include geothermal energy biomass solar power and wind power 4 Contents 1 Energy consumption in Costa Rica 2 Sources 2 1 Hydroelectricity 2 2 Geothermal power 2 3 Wind power 2 4 Solar power 2 5 Biomass 3 Energy organizations 3 1 Ministry of Environment and Energy 3 1 1 Sectoral Energy Department 3 2 Costa Rican Institute of Electricity ICE 3 3 Costa Rican Petroleum Refinery RECOPE S A 3 3 1 Hydrogen research 3 4 ACOPE 3 5 Consorcio Nacional de Empresas de Electrificacion de Costa Rica CONELECTRICAS R L 3 6 Costa Rican Association of Solar Energy ACESOLAR 4 2017 300 days of renewable energy 5 Carbon neutrality 6 Regulatory framework 7 Conflicts 7 1 Transportation 7 2 Reliability 7 3 Environmental and social impact 7 3 1 Controversy with El Diquis Hydroelectric Project 8 See also 9 ReferencesEnergy consumption in Costa Rica editThe commercial consumption of energy in Costa Rica has tripled from 1980 to 2009 The electricity consumption has increased by 4 2 times due to a high level of electrification 9 According to the World Bank 99 5 10 of the country s population has access to electricity Meanwhile fossil fuel s consumption has increased by 2 4 times caused by a significant growth of the number of motor vehicles The average yearly growing of hydrocarbons consumption in the last 20 years has been about 4 7 and electricity of 5 3 At this rate demand of electricity will double in 13 years and hydrocarbons in 15 years The dependency of Costa Rica for fossil fuels reached in 2009 the 64 of commercial energy while electricity 22 The rest of the basket consumption is completed by biomass 12 and other energy products 2 According with the World Bank as of 2013 the energy use per capita of Costa Rica was 1029 kg 11 of oil equivalent and the electric power consumption per capita 1955 kWh 12 Sources editCosta Rica electricity generation by source 2019 13 Hydropower 67 5 Wind 17 Geothermal 13 5 Biomass and solar 0 84 Non renewables 1 16 Hydroelectricity edit Costa Rica receives about 65 14 of its energy from hydroelectric plants alone due to its extreme amounts of rainfall and multiple rivers 15 As the largest source of energy hydropower represents the most important source of energy in the country but after inauguration of the Reventazon Dam the only big hydro project remaining in the planning stage by the Instituto Costarricense de Electricidad Costa Rican Institute of Electricity is the El Diquis Hydroelectric Project which has been suffering significant delays 16 due to pending environmental studies and the indigenous consultation that the state owned company should conduct in the framework of the United Nations procedures DamsCosta Rica s largest dams include The Lake Arenal Dam Lake Cachi Dam the Rio Macho Dam the Pirris Dam the Reventazon Dam and the proposed El Diquis Hydroelectric Project The Lake Arenal Dam was built in 1979 as the first dam intended solely for hydroelectric power usage It is located on Lake Arenal next to the famous Arenal Volcano one of the major tourist attractions in Costa Rica At about 33 square miles Lake Arenal provides enough electricity to power 12 of the country 17 The Lake Cachi Rio Macho and Pirris Dams are all powered by the Rio Reventazon Reventazon River and its tributaries nbsp Pirris Dam under construction in 2011 by the Costa Rican Institute of Electricity ICE The Cachi dam is situated on an artificial lake that was built in the 1970s and produces enough energy to power about 330 000 homes in Costa Rica It also controls floods and provides recreational activities in the lake Upstream of Cachi the Rio Macho hydroelectric power plant has been operating since 1963 to provide hydroelectric power for central Costa Rica 18 On the downstream the Pirris dam is one of the largest dams in Costa Rica and has the potential to power 160 000 homes It also employs 3 000 Costa Ricans and provides drinking water to 40 of the metropolitan city area The El Diquis Hydroelectric Project is a proposed hydroelectric system that Costa Rica plans to build as one of the largest Central American hydroelectric plant located in the Southern Pacific area of the country and is intended to provide the nation with 631MW enough energy to reach at least one million consumers The recently opened Reventazon Dam the current largest hydroelectric project of Central America is located on the Reventazon River with a generation contribution of 305 5MW to the National Electric System enough for providing electricity to more than 500 000 families 19 20 Geothermal power edit Geothermal power is a natural energy source that provides subterranean heat and power as a byproduct of volcanic energy Costa Rica has six currently active volcanoes and dozens of inactive volcanoes 21 Unlike many other forms of renewable energy geothermal can be continuously generated and is not dependent on weather Geothermal energy contributes to about 15 of the energy in the country 22 PlantsThe North Volcanic Mountain Ridge in Guanacaste is the region of Costa Rica with the most potential for geothermal power generation Volcanoes in the region include Miravalles Rincon de la Vieja and Tenorio The Miravalles Geothermal Field opened in 1994 contains five plants and results in the production of 14 of the National Electric System s power capacity or about 163 MW 23 The Pailas Geothermal Power Plant established in July 2011 produces a total of 55MW 24 and is located just outside Rincon de la Vieja National Park Rincon de la Vieja is a 600 000 year old volcano and the largest in the northwestern region of Costa Rica In 2014 Costa Rica s government approved legislation for a 958 million geothermal project in the region to offset the country s reliance on hydropower 25 Wind power edit nbsp Tejona wind farm Lake Arenal Costa RicaWhile Costa Rica is not known specifically for its wind power it was the first country in Latin America starting in 1996 to harness this resource 26 There have been a few different wind energy projects developed in the past decade In March 2015 The Costa Rican Institute of Electricity stated that they plan on doubling the installed wind capacity in the nation by 2017 27 As of 2011 only 2 1 of energy produced in the nation came from wind power 28 Wind Power is primarily used in Costa Rica during the months of December to March or the dry season During this period there is a general decreased rainfall in the nation and hydropower output decreases Costa Rica finished 2015 with an additional 59 MW of power generation in wind energy after the inauguration of the Orosi plant 50 MW in October and Vientos del Oeste project 9 MW As such the wind power total capacity in the country is planned to grow from 194 MW in 2015 to 393 MW by 2017 an increase that would represent approximately 10 5 of total electricity production 29 Between 1996 and 1999 the first three private wind power plants began operation and in 2002 Tejona plant built by the Instituto Costarricense de Electricidad Later the following plants were opened Guanacaste private 2009 Los Santos Wind Farm built by the public cooperative Coopesantos in 2011 in the heart of Los Santos region in San Jose the Valle Central built by the Compania Nacional de Fuerza y Luz or CNFL a Grupo ICE subsidiary in 2011 and Chiripa private 2015 In addition the construction of five private plants during 2016 Altamira Campos Azules Mogote Vientos de la Perla y Vientos de Miramar is planned as well as another by the Compania Nacional de Fuerza y Luz in 2017 Ventus Project FarmsCurrently there are nine large wind farms operating in Costa Rica The Tejona Wind Power Project TWPP is a 19 8 MW project fully operational since 2003 that consists of thirty wind turbines Most recently Tila Wind an even larger 20 MW farm opened in 2015 Three of the remaining eight are owned by ICE and Compania Nacional de Fuerza y Luz SA CNFL and CoopeSantos RL The remaining five are privately owned and nearly all of the wind power plants are in the province of Guanacaste 27 Solar power edit nbsp Solar potential of Costa RicaLike wind power solar power is another newer energy source in the country The first solar power projects in the country were established in 1978 by just a few researchers from public universities at the Solar Power Laboratory at the National University Though still on a smaller scale and mostly privately owned plans for larger more commercial projects are beginning to break through 30 Despite the country has a privileged position near the equator that combined with the sunny weather during the year made a solar power potential of more than 144 million MWh year 31 solar energy in Costa Rica is in its early stages and is even falling shorter than the rest of its Central American neighbors According with an Instituto Costarricense de Electricidad ICE study in 2006 the national photovoltaic potential of electric generation for the projected population for 2015 is 222 000 MWh year 32 In 2012 Costa Rica inaugurated the Miravalles Solar Park on the hillside of the Miravalles Volcano At that time it was the first of its kind in Costa Rica and the largest solar project in Central America 33 It was built with the help of the Japanese International Cooperation Agency JICA The project s totaling was 11 5 million 10 million from JICA and 1 5 million from ICE 34 This plant of 1MW only represents 0 03 of all the capacity installed in the country of 2872 MW In 2013 China and Costa Rica signed agreements of US 30 million for financing the installation of 50 thousand solar panels including a power plant of 10 MW 35 In addition in 2014 ICE announced a pilot program for solar energy use in housing that aimed to reach 600 000 clients 36 but in 2015 the institution ended the plan arguing that the maximum capacity was already reached rising criticism from the solar energy distributed generation sector According with ACESOLAR 37 more than 1000 jobs were at risk for such a decision Differences of bureaucracy procedures and technical aspects related to the official national norm Planeacion Operacion y Acceso al Sistema Electrico Nacional POASEN in Spanish on introducing distributed generation have been occurring and causing delays 38 39 in its implementation through the last years among the main actors of the solar sector the Ministry of Environment and Energy MINAE the Autoridad Reguladora de Servicios Publicos ARESEP in Spanish a public entity that fixes prices and standards on public services the electricity agencies of the country and the private companies that supply solar panels One of the main discrepancies between MINAE and ARESEP was the legal nature of net metering being solved by the Attorney General of the Republic Procuraduria General de la Republica in Spanish in June 2015 40 The final resolution stated that distributed generation for self consumption is not considered a public service in Costa Rica In October 2015 the government finally published 41 the required regulatory framework that entered into operation in April 2016 By 2013 countries like Guatemala or Honduras have 85 MW and 388 MW of solar power capacity installed respectively and Nicaragua and Panama are also ahead of Costa Rica with 1 4 MW and 42 7 MW according with a report 42 released in July 2016 by the Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean CEPAL in Spanish ICE s position is that the maximum capacity that could be allowed in the National Electric System is 60 MW distributed in plants of no more than 5 MW across the territory 43 However the institution is not reporting to develop more solar projects in the next 10 years in their expansion plan Biomass edit As of 2011 only 0 25 of energy produced in Costa Rica came from biomass The Jorge Manuel Dengo Obregon National Development Plan proposes the development of sustainable biomass for energy Currently biomass is primarily used for cooking and heating kitchen appliances to reduce the reliance on petroleum in the household 28 Energy organizations editMinistry of Environment and Energy edit The Ministry of Environment and Energy of Costa Rica MINAE in English is the governmental institution responsible of the management of the resources of Costa Rica in the environmental and energy field The president of Costa Rica Luis Guillermo Solis Rivera appointed 44 engineer Irene Canaz Diaz a former consultant of the Deutsche Gesellschaft fur Internationale Zusammenarbeit as Vice minister of Energy in May 2014 According with the Ministry s goals the energy agenda of Costa Rica aims to generate a more rational and efficient use of energy resources reduce the dependency to international markets and prepare the country to face climate change and oil depletion 45 The Viceministry of Energy has three general departments Sectoral Energy Hydrocarbons and Transportation and Fuels Marketing Sectoral Energy Department edit The Sectoral Energy Department Direccion Sectorial de Energia or DSE in Spanish is responsible to create and promote the integral energy planning using policies and strategic actions for guaranteeing the supply and quality of energy of Costa Rica Among the objectives of the DSE they are responsible 46 of creating the National Energy Plan taking into account the National Development Plan of Costa Rica as well as the demands of the Ministry of Environment and Energy Costa Rican Institute of Electricity ICE edit The Costa Rican Institute of Electricity Spanish Instituto Costarricense de Electricidad ICE was created on April 8 1949 47 as an autonomous state owned institution as a way to solve the issues of electric energy availability that the country was faced during the 1940s Since then the ICE has been executing the electrical development of Costa Rica In the last years the institution has evolved as a corporation Grupo ICE clustering other public companies that include Radiografica Costarricense RACSA and the National Company of Power and Illumination Compania Nacional de Fuerza y Luz CNFL Grupo ICE has used as primary source the hydroelectricity for developing its infrastructure but it has also built and is currently building several geothermal wind and solar energy projects It has more than 15 000 48 workers and has customer service offices in the whole country Although the first large scale hydroelectric station began to function at the beginning of the 1900s large scale hydroelectric power and electricity did not begin to be developed until the formation of Grupo ICE 49 Costa Rican Petroleum Refinery RECOPE S A edit The Costa Rican Petroleum Refinery Refinadora Costarricense de Petroleo RECOPE in Spanish is a state owned institution considered the biggest company in Central America Since its creation in 1963 and nationalized in 1974 RECOPE focuses its operations on import and distribution of fossil fuels in Costa Rica 50 In the research field RECOPE has an experimental plant of biodiesel and through internships and agreements works with public universities of Costa Rica and research centers in the developing of alternative fuels like biofuels natural gas and hydrogen Hydrogen research edit In 2011 the board of directors of RECOPE signed a partnership with Ad Astra Rocket Company an American rocket propulsion company with facilities in Costa Rica to jointly research hydrogen technologies for the transport sector 51 The project comprehends three phases phase A focused in the development of a feasibility study and to generate capacities for designing a station of compression and storage of hydrogen delivered in 2012 phase B designing and implementation of the storage system delivered in 2013 and phase C development of the integrated and autonomous system of energy supply from hydrogen The research work has been stranded since 2014 when the new administration of RECOPE decided to not continue with the initiative arguing doubts about the legal authority of RECOPE to invest in clean energy In March 2015 the CEO of Ad Astra Rocket Company and former Costa Rican American astronaut Dr Franklin Chang Diaz announced the end of relations 52 with RECOPE due their lack of definition and the delays the project was suffering The announcement was followed by harsh criticism of the population and national media against RECOPE s board of directors as well as other governmental institutions involved in the decision 53 54 ACOPE edit Asociacion Costarricense de Productores de Energia ACOPE was founded in 1989 and represents more than 40 private hydroelectric wind and biomass units generating in the country Though there are a few large private energy companies in Costa Rica most primarily generate power to sell to ICE Consorcio Nacional de Empresas de Electrificacion de Costa Rica CONELECTRICAS R L edit Consorcio Nacional de Empresas de Electrificacion de Costa Rica Conelectricas formed in 1989 is a union that aims to develop hydroelectric projects The union consists of four smaller agencies Coopeguanacaste R L Coope Alfaro Ruiz R L Coopelesca R L and Coopesantos R L Together these four cooperatives provide electricity to around 500 000 people or 22 of the country 28 This consortium operates the San Lorenzo Hydroelectric Center and the Sigifredo Solis Solis Hydroelectric Center both in San Ramon 55 Costa Rican Association of Solar Energy ACESOLAR edit The Asociacion Costarricense de Energia Solar ACESOLAR in Spanish 56 is a NGO which its main objective is to promote the use and development of solar energy in the country The organization collaborate with the private and public representatives related to the sector 2017 300 days of renewable energy editAt the start of January 2017 Costa Rica s 4 9 million person population ran entirely on renewable energy power for 75 days straight This was a record breaking achievement in that Costa Rica was the first nation to power itself completely clean of fossil fuels for this long a timeframe This summer was an exceptionally rainy one for Costa Rica while usually the dry season the sheer amount of power provided from an unusually high amount of precipitation led to a higher than usual amount of hydroelectricity generated 15 Carbon neutrality editIn 2007 the administration of former president of Costa Rica Oscar Arias Sanchez announced the national goal to become Costa Rica the second carbon neutral country in the world first one was Bhutan by 2021 the same year when the country will celebrate 200 years of independence from Spain The proposal was officially presented to the United Nations Framework for Climate Change Convention UNFCCC in 2010 The initiative has been kept 57 by the next administrations of President Laura Chinchilla Miranda and Luis Guillermo Solis Rivera and aims to evolve the national economy s carbon footprint to no more than 1 ton of CO2 emissions per capita Costa Rica aims to generate 100 carbon neutral electricity by 2021 49 Apart from relying 99 on renewable low carbon electricity carbon neutrality is to be achieved by resort to electric and hybrid transportation 58 In addition the Costa Rican government is also beginning to offset the country s carbon dioxide emissions with new budgeting laws and incentives including measures to promote biofuels hybrid vehicles and clean energy Another way of offsetting emissions will be a C Neutral levy which will certify that ecotourism and other industrial practices are offsetting their carbon emissions At 10 per one ton of carbon the money will fund conservation reforestation and research 59 The proposal requires the substitution of low emission technologies for fossil hydrocarbon FHC energy in the country and the transformation of the transport subsector which represents 66 of national FHC emissions and 54 60 of the total CO2 emissions into lower carbon footprint technologies such as electric vehicles biofuels hybrid cars and hydrogen vehicles as well as the promotion among the population of greater reliance on the public transport system 41 of the total CO2 emissions in the transport subsector come from particular vehicles according to the government These measures could allow the country to save between US 1 5 and 2 billion per year 61 In order to achieve the goal Costa Rica also needs to improve its waste management practices and agriculture methods as these account for significant proportions of national GHG emissions In recent years the private sector has been actively involved in adoption of energy efficiency policies and developing low carbon certification The National Institute of Technical Norms of Costa Rica INTECO in Spanish published the regulations that private companies should follow to get carbon neutral certification Regulatory framework editThe energy policy of the current administration is guided by the concept of energy sustainability with low emissions The VII Plan Nacional de Energia 2015 2030 62 was designed according to the priorities of the National Development Plan 2015 2018 and the government plan of President Luis Guillermo Solis Rivera The plan is based in five main objectives that are 1 introducing changes in the National Power System for increasing energy efficiency savings and improve the management of electricity demand 2 encouraging the development of distributed generation and self consumption electricity 3 to update the law and institutional framework specialized in promoting energy efficiency 4 to improve the calculation methods of electricity tariffs and 5 to raise the management efficiency of public entities of the electricity sector Regarding the transport sector the national energy plan is also including as its main goals to promote cleaner systems and clients of collective transport for hence mitigate the effects of global warming as well as encouraging the use of alternative fuels in the transport system reducing the dependency of hydrocarbons the emission of polluting gases and improve the regulations for importing new and used vehicles in order to promote energy efficiency and polluting reduction In addition the National Development Plan of Costa Rica 2015 2018 63 establish the sectoral objectives for the energy policy 1 To promote actions facing global climate change through citizens participation technological change innovation processes research and knowledge for ensuring the welfare human security and competitiveness of the country and 2 supply energy demand of the country using an energy matrix that ensure an optimal and continuous supply of electricity and fuels promoting an efficient use of energy for keeping and improve the competitiveness of the country Utility private scale projects 64 are regulated by the Law 7200 65 Ley que Autoriza la Generacion Electrica Autonoma o Paralela in Spanish approved by the Legislative Assembly of Costa Rica in 1990 The private sector provides to Instituto Costarricense de Electricidad ICE nearly a quarter of the electricity generation capacity available and 10 of generated However there is still debate about how much private participation should be in the market By 2013 approximately 14 5 of the total generation in the country was provided by private companies and 23 of installed capacity in the National Power System according with ICE 66 The Law 7200 establishes that ICE has two ways to buy private electric generation In Chapter I it is defined the regimen of autonomous or parallel generation that regulates the BOO Build Own and Operate contracts Article 7 of the law states that the ICE will be able to declare eligible a project for the use of a plant of limited capacity meanwhile the power with the exception of parallel generation doesn t represent more than 15 of the collective power of electric plants that constitutes the National Power System In Chapter II it is defined the competitive regimen that regulates the BOT Build Operate and Transfer contracts Article 20 allows the ICE to buy electric energy from private companies up to an additional 15 of the limit specified in Article 7 This authorization is entitled for acquiring energy from hydro geothermal wind and any other non conventional source in bundles equal or smaller than 50 000 kW of maximum power added by Law 7508 on May 9 1995 By 2014 ICE had 25 BOO contracts and 9 BOT contracts Despite political pressure to increase the participation of private companies and opening the market for reducing the costs of electricity ICE is opposing the idea arguing their expansion plan is already solving the demand for 20 years ahead and the costs of the generation matrix are the lowest According to ICE 67 until 2020 the country will need 850 MW of power generation and all this demand is already considered with the current on going projects Although the country has abundant renewable energy resources more than 25 of Costa Rican territory has been entitled as natural protected land reducing and limiting the possibility to explore and exploit these renewable sources like geothermal energy in national parks 68 In 2016 continuous discussions in the Legislative Assembly of Costa Rica have been occurring for a reform that would allow the ICE to exploit geothermal energy in protected areas The Project 19 233 was presented by the former candidate to the Presidency of the Republic and incumbent Congress Representative Otton Solis from the Citizen Action Party In turn the ICE would compensate land used for the projects with land outside the parks The bill addresses concerns over geothermal electricity generation in Rincon de la Vieja Tenorio and Arenal Volcano national parks 69 This initiative has raising concerns from some activists that claim the environmental controls led in the country by the National Technical Bureau of Environment Secretaria Tecnica Nacional del Ambiente SETENA in Spanish are weak The activists also argue the process of exploration for geothermal energy is similar than those used in oil and mining 70 However in June 2015 the Minister of Environment and Energy Edgar Gutierrez Espeleta alleged MINAE is not currently planning to exploit geothermal energy in national parks and will postpone the decision until further research about its impact in the country and its biodiversity is made 71 Conflicts editTransportation edit See also Plug in electric vehicles in Costa Rica The biggest obstacle to carbon neutrality is the transportation sector Vehicles consume 70 of the petroleum consumed in the nation which is 40 of the total carbon emissions The primary mode of public transportation is diesel powered buses More than 50 of Costa Rica s personal passenger cars are over 20 years old with high polluting engines though the government is beginning to propose new hybrid and plug in electric vehicle initiatives The existing rail network is limited to the Central Valley and not electrified Other proposed solutions include an upgrade of the rail network including electrification gondolas and trolleys in the metropolitan Costa Rican Central Valley 72 Reliability edit Though hydroelectricity from dams is a high density and high power energy source it is also highly dependent on weather conditions Hydropower is reliant on rainfall and is therefore not the most reliable form of energy during seasons of drought After an extreme season of drought in 2014 Costa Rica was forced to resort to diesel generators since sufficient rainfall was unavailable to power any of the hydroelectric dams 1 Solar is an energy source that is highly dependent on weather conditions and has therefore been used on a much smaller scale than hydroelectric wind and geothermal energy 15 Environmental and social impact edit One main barrier to extensive geothermal power is the abundance of national parks and protected areas that prevent excavation near many of Costa Rican s volcanoes For example though Rincon de la Vieja has the potential to fuel a high density of geothermal energy Costa Rican law currently prohibits the extraction of resources inside national parks in order to preserve the land 23 Hydroelectric dams have also been criticized for their effects on the surrounding ecosystems Controversy around hydroelectric dam usage stems from both environmental impact on a surrounding region and from human displacement of land Hydroelectric dams have been equated to interference in fish migration patterns ecosystem disrupt interference in water quality and land degradation from flooding the land 73 The Pirris dam especially caused much controversy regarding the displacement of people who lived in the area especially in relation to the indigenous peoples of Costa Rica Though dams provide job opportunities for locals they also displace large populations of humans 18 Controversy with El Diquis Hydroelectric Project edit The El Diquis Hydroelectric Project has been one of the most important projects for the Instituto Costarricense de Electricidad it will be the biggest hydropower dam of the Central American region and it is designed to provide stability and reliability to the Costa Rican electricity generation grid Diquis will produce 655 MW for a total of 3050 MW Its reservoir will extent to an area of approximately 7 407 ha 900 ha of it in indigenous protected lands and its tunnel of 9 m diameter will have more than 11 km length The project will require to move seven communities from the area that is more than a thousand families The project total expected cost is around US 2 billion 74 The size of the project and its impact on the local population have raised concerns throughout the years Among the actions deployed by the activists against the project are lawsuits for environmental damages protests and communications breaks with the government and Grupo ICE s authorities 75 The Diquis s reservoir is projected to flood 10 of the China Kicha territory 104 ha and 8 of Terraba land 726 ha 76 Diquis is currently in the pre investment phase but its impact over culture environment and life in general for the indigenous made involved the United Nations Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination CERD as a key actor since 2011 77 after a letter sent by representatives of the indigenous Terraba community In their notification letter CERD reminded to Costa Rica the obligations of consult and participation to all indigenous communities that would be affected by the project The country replied to the U N informing the status of the project and highlighting that the construction has not initiated yet In July 2015 a US 200 million lawsuit against ICE and the Government of Costa Rica set by one of the associations representing the indigenous communities alleging presumed environmental damage during the preliminary exploration works was dismissed 78 by a justice court In October 2016 after a failed meeting with authorities of the Government of Costa Rica led by the Vice minister of the Presidency Ana Gabriel Zuniga a group of indigenous representatives and local leaders confirmed their non negotiable position against the project 79 The Government argued that they are currently working in a decree to facilitate the consultation process which should be released by January 2017 In November 2016 the Constitutional Court of Costa Rica declared unconstitutional 80 the Article 8 of the presidential decree that establish that the ICE is allowed to exploit materials for the dam the powerhouse and collateral works in the areas where indigenous communities are located On November 2 2018 ICE indefinitely suspended the Diquis project 81 See also edit nbsp Costa Rica portal nbsp Energy portalList of power stations in Costa RicaReferences edit a b c Costa Rica ran almost entirely on renewable energy in 2016 Mashable UK 1 January 2017 Retrieved 2015 11 23 Costa Rica Fossil Fuel Energy Consumption of total Indexmundi Retrieved 10 April 2019 All that glitters is not green Costa Rica s renewables conceal dependence on oil The Guardian Retrieved 5 January 2017 a b Costa Rica Is 99 Powered By Renewable Energy MetaEfficient MetaEfficient Retrieved 2015 11 23 Costa Rica hits 75 days powered entirely by renewable energy Retrieved 7 December 2016 Costa Rica se abastecio solo con energia renovable por 110 dias seguidos Retrieved 6 December 2016 Barash David P 2013 12 15 Costa Rica s peace dividend How abolishing the military paid off Los Angeles Times ISSN 0458 3035 Retrieved 2015 11 30 Costa Rica Geography Facts amp Stats www nationmaster com Retrieved 2015 11 30 Agenda Energetica Ministerio de Ambiente y Energia Retrieved 30 November 2016 World Development Indicators Electricity production sources and access Retrieved 30 November 2016 World Development Indicators Energy production and use World Development Indicators Power and communications Retrieved 30 November 2016 Zuniga Alejandro 2019 09 24 Costa Rica will run on more than 98 renewable energy for fifth consecutive year government says The Tico Times Retrieved 2023 10 09 VII National Energy Plan of Costa Rica Sectoral Energy Department of the Ministry of Environment and Energy of Costa Rica Retrieved 2016 11 25 a b c Water Fire and Costa Rica s Carbon Zero Year So Far WIRED Retrieved 2015 11 11 Murillo Alvaro 30 July 2014 Dialogo con indigenas atrasara todavia mas proyecto El Diquis Newspaper La Nacion Retrieved 26 November 2016 Lake Arenal Dam Costa Rica arenal net Retrieved 2015 11 14 a b hydro costa rica www industcards com Retrieved 2015 11 14 Costa Rica inaugura la hidroelectrica mas grande de Centroamerica La Prensa Honduras Agencia EFE 16 September 2016 Retrieved 26 November 2016 Water Costa Rica s Environment blogs nelson wisc edu Retrieved 2015 11 11 Exciting volcanic action happening at Rincon de la Vieja Enchanting Costa Rica Enchanting Costa Rica Retrieved 2015 11 11 Costa Rica Has Only Used Renewable Energy For Electricity This Year IFLScience Retrieved 2015 11 11 a b Paul Moya Emilia M Rodriguez and Alfredo Mainier UTILIZATION OF GEOTHERMAL ENERGY IN PROTECTED AREAS OF COSTA RICA Instituto Costarricense de Electricidad UEN de Proyectos y Servicios Asociados LAS PAILAS GEOTHERMAL PROJECT www eib org Retrieved 2015 11 13 Siegel RP Costa Rica went 100 renewable then saw energy prices fall GreenBiz Retrieved 2015 11 13 Costa Rica supera los 400 megavatios de capacidad eolica instalada Retrieved 25 April 2020 a b Costa Rica to double wind power by 2017 SeeNews Renewables renewables seenews com Retrieved 2015 11 14 a b c Home Observatory for Renewable Energy renenergyobservatory org Retrieved 2015 11 23 Costa Rica suma mas eolica REVE Revista Eolica y del Vehiculo Electrico 17 November 2015 Retrieved 12 December 2016 Lopez Jaime 23 January 2014 Major Solar Energy Project Planned in Guanacaste Costa Rica Star News Costa Rica Star News Retrieved 30 November 2016 Costa Rica Energy Resources Open Energy Information en openei org Retrieved 5 December 2016 Wright Jaime Estudio del potencial solar en Costa Rica PDF acesolar org Instituto Costarricense de Electricidad p 62 Retrieved 5 December 2016 STAFF TCRN 7 May 2016 The Coming of Solar Energy to Costa Rica The Costa Rica News The Costa Rica News Retrieved 5 December 2016 Dolezal Adam et al The Way Forward for Renewable Energy in Central America PDF World Watch Institute World Watch Institute p 28 Retrieved 5 December 2016 Arias Juan 2 June 2013 China financiara paneles solares para que Costa Rica alcance el 100 de cobertura electrica en hogares La Nacion Retrieved 5 December 2016 Madrigal Maria 21 February 2014 Mas de 600 mil clientes del ICE pueden optar por un plan de energia solar tecdigital tec ac cr TECDigital AmeliaRueda com Retrieved 5 December 2016 Fornaguera Irela 20 February 2015 Cese de plan piloto del ICE alarma al sector energetico La Nacion Retrieved 5 December 2016 Fornaguera Irela 20 February 2015 Falta de reglamentos apaga la generacion solar en Costa Rica La Nacion Retrieved 5 December 2016 Pomareda Fabiola 29 September 2014 Delays excuses and gripes mark approaching deadline for distributed electricity generation in Costa Rica The Tico Times Retrieved 5 December 2016 Rojas Pablo 2 July 2015 Minae gana pulso a Aresep Procuraduria dicta que generacion distribuida para autoconsumo no es servicio publico in European Spanish CRHoy com Retrieved 5 December 2016 Rojas Pablo 9 October 2015 Publican reglamento sobre generacion para autoconsumo CRHoy com Periodico Digital Costa Rica Noticias 24 7 in European Spanish CRHoy com Retrieved 5 December 2016 Comision Economica para America Latina y el Caribe 26 July 2016 Estudio Economico de America Latina y el Caribe 2016 LC G 2684 P www cepal org in Spanish Santiago Comision Economica para America Latina y el Caribe CEPAL Retrieved 5 December 2016 Lara Juan 31 October 2016 Istmo rebasa a Costa Rica en generacion solar de electricidad La Nacion Retrieved 5 December 2016 Coordinadora del Programa 4E GIZ fue nombrada Viceministra de Energia en Costa Rica Programa de Energias Renovables y Eficiencia Energetica en Centroamerica Retrieved 30 November 2016 Agenda Energetica www minae go cr Retrieved 30 November 2016 Objetivos de la Direccion Sectorial de Energia Retrieved 30 November 2016 Historia del Grupo ICE Grupo ICE Retrieved 30 November 2016 Acerca del Grupo ICE Grupo ICE Retrieved 30 November 2016 a b A renewable power generation primer The Tico Times Costa Rica News Travel Real Estate Retrieved 2015 11 11 Marco Filosofico de RECOPE RECOPE Retrieved 30 November 2016 Chang Franklin Del Petroleo al Hidrogeno Una Aspiracion Con Grandes Posibilidades Para Costa Rica PDF Retrieved 30 November 2016 Ruiz Gerardo 4 March 2015 Ad Astra rompe relacion con Recope para usar hidrogeno como combustible El Financiero Retrieved 30 November 2016 Rojas Pablo 13 August 2015 Franklin Chang sobre proyecto de hidrogeno no han entendido lo que significa Retrieved 30 November 2016 Arguedas Diego 11 March 2015 Franklin Chang presidente de Ad Astra Rockets Torpeza estatal se ha incrementado a traves de muchos anos Retrieved 30 November 2016 CONELECTRICAS R L Quien es ACESOLAR ACESOLAR www acesolar org Retrieved 5 December 2016 Ministry of Environment and Energy of Costa Rica COP21 Paris 2015 www minae go cr Retrieved 14 December 2016 Go 100 Renewable Energy Project DetailView www go100percent org Retrieved 2015 11 12 Costa Rica Aims to Become First Carbon Neutral Country Worldwatch Institute www worldwatch org Retrieved 2015 11 14 VII National Energy Plan of Costa Rica 2015 2030 Ministerio de Ambiente y Energia MINAE Programa de las Naciones Unidas para el Desarrollo PNUD 1 ed San Jose C R PNUD 2015 www dse go cr p 93 Retrieved 14 December 2016 Leon Pedro et al 2010 Informe Estado de La Nacion 2010 Chapter 6 Page 280 PDF Programa Estado de la Nacion Retrieved 14 December 2016 Ministerio de Ambiente y Energia MINAE Programa de las Naciones Unidas para el Desarrollo PNUD VII National Energy Plan of Costa Rica 2015 2030 PDF 1 ed p 7 ISBN 978 9968 794 70 1 Costa Rica Ministerio de Planificacion Nacional y Politica Economica 2014 Plan Nacional de Desarrollo 2015 2018 Alberto Canas Escalante Ministerio de Planificacion Nacional y Politica Economica PDF p 478 ISBN 978 9977 73 084 4 Solarplaza Green giant Costa Rica struggles to fulfill solar promises www solarplaza com Retrieved 7 December 2016 Asamblea Legislativa de la Republica de Costa Rica Ley 7200 PDF Sancho Manuel Generacion electrica privada representa el 15 de la total en el pais Crhoy com CRHoy com Periodico Digital Costa Rica Noticias 24 7 in European Spanish CRHoy com Retrieved 7 December 2016 Sancho Manuel 24 March 2014 Posibles soluciones a los aumentos en tarifas electricas varian mientras sectores privados reclaman Crhoy com CRHoy com Periodico Digital Costa Rica Noticias 24 7 in European Spanish CRHoy com Retrieved 7 December 2016 reegle clean energy information gateway reegle clean energy information gateway Retrieved 7 December 2016 Legislature to hear bill allowing Costa Rica geothermal energy in national parks The Tico Times Costa Rica News Travel Real Estate Retrieved 2015 11 24 Chacon Vinicio 13 July 2016 Debate por explotacion de geotermia en parques nacionales se reaviva Semanario Universidad Semanario Universidad in European Spanish Retrieved 7 December 2016 Quesada Pablo June 2 2015 Minae no explotara energia geotermica en Parques Nacionales laprensalibre cr www laprensalibre cr Retrieved 7 December 2016 Costa Rica s renewable energy streak is still going but what does that really mean The Tico Times Costa Rica News Travel Real Estate Retrieved 2015 11 13 Hydropower Facts Hydropower Information National Geographic National Geographic Archived from the original on January 15 2010 Retrieved 2015 11 23 Proyecto Hidroelectrico El Diquis Informacion General pheldiquis cr Grupo ICE Retrieved 12 December 2016 Ramirez Eduardo 23 June 2010 Represa Diquis del ICE genera divergencias Indigenas y comunidades combaten proyectos de electricidad Semanario Universidad Semanario Universidad in European Spanish Retrieved 12 December 2016 Lara Juan Fernando 15 March 2016 Gobierno emite reglas de consulta indigena para hacer planta hidroelectrica www nacion com La Nacion Retrieved 12 December 2016 ONU alerta a pais por usar tierra indigena para represa La Nacion 3 April 2011 Retrieved 12 December 2016 Vizcaino Irene 31 July 2015 ICE se libra de demanda por ocupar tierras indigenas para planta El Diquis La Nacion Retrieved 12 December 2016 Chinchilla Sofia 31 October 2016 Indigenas reafirman oposicion innegociable a plan de represa La Nacion Retrieved 12 December 2016 Angulo Yamileth 2 November 2016 Sala IV anula permiso dado al ICE para desarrollar Diquis en territorios indigenas elmundo cr in European Spanish Retrieved 12 December 2016 Alvarado Laura 3 November 2018 ICE announces suspension of Diquis Hydroelectric project in Costa Rica news co cr Retrieved 1 April 2021 Panela Pancha Panqueque Tortilla Figura importante de gobierno 1987 Costa Rica debe mejorar en el biomass porque eso afecta mucho al pais Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Renewable energy in Costa Rica amp oldid 1186574808 Solar power, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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