With joint support from the Climate Development Knowledge Network and the Energy and Environment Partnership with Central America,
and in close cooperation with the INCAE Business School, the Worldwatch Institute has
completed a study that is a “roadmap of a roadmap”—it scopes the improvements that need to happen with regard to the key components of a sustainable energy system and establishes the necessary methodology and groundwork for comprehensive national energy strategies in Central America.
It also analyzes the
conditions necessary for their advancement. The report identifies important
knowledge and information gaps and evaluates key finance and policy barriers,
making suggestions for how to overcome both.
Below are the report's key findings:
- Central America, long a frontrunner in hydropower and geothermal energy, is exploring its potential for expanding these technologies in a more sustainable manner while also developing other renewable energy resources such as wind, solar, biofuels, and agricultural waste. Costa Rica is leading the world in its ambition to be “carbon neutral” by 2021.
- As Belize, Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua, and Panama expand, use of fossil fuels is on the rise, while the use of fuelwood, primarily for cooking, continues to be unsustainable and high.
- Across the region, an estimated 7 million people still have limited or no access to electricity services. Renewables are the only convincing and affordable solution to provide underserved communities that are far from existing grids with access to modern energy services.
- Central America’s non-hydro renewable electricity share is 13 percent, impressive when compared to the global average of only 5 percent. The urgent challenge for the region is to build on past successes and avoid locking in economically, socially, and environmentally costly fossil fuels for decades to come.
- The potentials for renewables are enormous: Geothermal alone could satisfy nearly twice the region’s predicted electricity demand through 2020. Existing regional wind power installations currently use less than 1% of the available resource potential. Solar and biomass have enormous potentials throughout the region.
- Despite their sustainable energy ambitions and policy statements, the seven countries of Central America have been unable to comprehensively design, synchronize, and implement the program of work necessary to promote sustainable energy solutions to their full potential.

- Produce additional, detailed assessments of renewable resource potentials in the region and make them publicly available.. This is something Crowd Energia is interested in working toward.
- Assess renewable resource technical potentials via an integrated energy planning approach
- Assess and communicate widely the full socioeconomic impacts of different energy scenarios, including impacts on local economies and job creation; and
- Increase efforts to support national and regional renewable energy research; boost public awareness of renewables; and strengthen the related knowledge and human resource capacities of the government, banking, and private industry sectors.
Overcome the following finance and policy barriers:
- Evaluate existing policy instruments related to renewables and, where necessary, refine the policy mix;
- Streamline administrative processes for developing new renewable energy projects and make them less costly and time intensive
- Establish clear indicators for measuring, evaluating, and reporting progress on renewable energy policies and investment environments
Central America can power its economies in large part with
renewable energy sources, helping the region and the world to address some of its most
pressing development challenges. What is needed now is the continued,
collaborative effort of researchers, governments, and the private sector to
help realize this goal.
Follow the link below to read the full report.
http://www.worldwatch.org/system/files/CA_report_highres_english_2013.pdf
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