State of Play for 100% Renewable Energy Futures for Cuba: Recent Changes and Challenges
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Background Materials and Methods Used
3. Results: Review of the Recent Developments in Cuba’s Energy Transition
3.1. Recent Changes in the Policy, Planning, Legal and Regulatory Framework
- Conceptualization of the Cuban Economic and Social Model of Socialist Development (Conceptualización del Modelo Económico y Social Cubano de Desarrollo Socialista);
- The Economic and Social Development Plan until 2030: Vision of the Nation, Strategic axis and Sectors (Bases del Plan Nacional de Desarrollo Económico y Social hasta el 2030: Visión de la Nación, Ejes y Sectores Estratégicos); and
- Guidelines for the Economic and Social Policy of the Party and the Revolution for the Period 2016–2021 (Lineamientos de la política económica y social del Partido y la Revolución para el periodo 2016–2021) [4].
3.2. Strengths, Weaknesses, Threats and Opportunities (SWOT) in the Path towards Renewable Energy Future in Cuba
Strengths | Dimension | Source |
---|---|---|
Renewable energy policy reforms and commitment | Political | [4] |
Commitment from central level to renewable energy | Political | [24] |
Governmental policy that prioritizes research and technological innovation | Political | [13] |
Transparent legal framework | Political | [13] |
Reforms in decentralization of decisive power | Political | [4,6,26] |
Relatively stable political, social and legal conditions | Political/Social | [13] |
Reforms in private investment promotion | Political/Economic | [13,14,15,20] |
Agreements signed by Cuba in the region and internationally | Economic/Political | [13] |
Sectoral policies identifying investment opportunities with foreign capital | Economic | [13] |
Single Window for Foreign Investment (VUINEX) in 2020 | Economic | [13] |
Increased economic freedoms to municipalities | Economic | [4,6,26] |
Tax benefits, import exemptions for renewable energy equipment | Economic | [19,20] |
Feed-in tariffs for companies and individuals | Economic | [21,22] |
Geographical location in the center of an expanding market | Economic | [13] |
Dialogue and cooperation agreement with the European Union | Economic/Political | [27,28,29,30] |
History of energy revolutions (renewable energy and energy efficiency and savings) | Social/Cultural | [1,2,3,31] |
Public awareness on demand side management | Social | [3,32] |
Satisfactory social indicators on development (health, education) | Social | [27] |
Skilled, educated and inexpensive workforce | Social | [27,31,32] |
Basic infrastructure and communications networks throughout the country | Technological | [13] |
High electrification rate (>99%) | Technological | [2,16,31,33] |
Highly distributed system (40%) | Technological | [16,31] |
Availability of renewable resources (solar, wind and biomass) | Environmental | [25,34] |
Biomass/sugar co-location | Environmental | [31,35] |
Dimension | Source | |
---|---|---|
Quality, transparency and access to energy data (especially at community level) | Political/Technological | [2,3,32] |
Highly subsidized electricity tariffs | Political/Social/Economic | [42] |
State control over wholesale trade, credit, foreign trade and foreign investment | Economic/Political | [27] |
Lack of finances for maintenance of power plants | Economic | [43] |
Cumbersome investment processes and internal issues that hinder attracting foreign capital | Economic | [27,31,45] |
Low share of RES in electricity production | Economic/Technological | [24,30,41] |
Low competitiveness of goods and services | Economic | [27,30] |
High average cost of delivered energy | Economic/Technological | [16,40,43] |
Single offtaker (UNE) | Economic/Political | [31,41] |
Lack of incentives and mechanisms for IPPs, energy service companies, local governments and cooperatives | Economic/Political | [36] |
Problems of convertibility of the Cuban peso | Economic/Political | [27,42] |
Limited market opportunities and legal framework due to state monopoly and black market | Economic | [46,47] |
Weak investment and infrastructure environment | Economic | [27] |
Limited public participation in the defining, implementation and evaluation of RE decisions | Social/Political | [36,37] |
Limited instruments and freedom of the local government to manage the renewable energy investments | Social/Political | [36,37] |
Insufficient knowledge and motivation of local stakeholders on energy issues | Social/Cultural | [1,2,3] |
Limited absorptive capacity of organizations on renewable energy | Social/Cultural | [40] |
Lack of experience and transparency in RE projects | Social/Technological | [31] |
Inefficient use of energy related to low culture of energy saving | Social/Cultural | [36] |
Shortages of necessities (electricity, goods) | Social/Economic | [16,27] |
High reliance of imported fuels | Technological | [16,31,48,49,50] |
Aging grid infrastructure and production facilities | Technological | [16,31,50] |
Manual control of supply–demand balance in the electricity system (vs. automation, predictability) | Technological | [41] |
Operating reserves of the electricity system are insufficient | Technological | [43] |
High losses in distribution networks | Technological | [42] |
Failure of several high-generation thermoelectric plants and the lack of fuel | Technological/Economic | [16] |
Limited energy storage alternatives (especially for intermittent energy sources) | Technological | [41,50] |
Low efficiency through the value chain from production to distribution and consumption | Technological/Social | [41] |
Environmental pollution by old thermoelectric power plants | Environmental | [41] |
Lack of motivation and qualified staff for renewables’ implementation | Cultural/Technological | [1,2] |
Opportunities | Dimension | Source |
---|---|---|
Increased interest and external engagement (EU, China, etc.) | Political/Economic | [14,28,30,31,59,60] |
Potential ease of sanctions by the US | Political/economic | [59] |
Transformation of the energy sector towards renewables (not only electricity) | Political/Technological/Economic | [48,50,55,56] |
Availability of international/development/climate financing | Economic | [52,53,54,55,56] |
High share of Cuban diaspora (remittances) interested in investing in Cuba | Economic | [65,66] |
Prosumerism and energy entrepreneurship by stakeholders at different scales | Economic | [14,36,67] |
Savings from imported fossil fuels | Economic | [2,25,41,44] |
Rural employment creation through renewables | Economic/Social | [14,36,41,67] |
Energy markets (local, national/regional) | Economic | [22,67] |
Investment potential in various sectors and relatively low competition (in the energy sector alone over 100 investment opportunities identified) | Economic | [13,27] |
Potential for demand side improvements in energy efficiency and energy saving | Social/Cultural | [36,42] |
Sustainability image as a sustainable energy pioneer | Environmental | [40] |
Reducing GHG emissions and environmental impacts of the energy sector | Environmental | [25,41,53] |
Threats | Dimension | Source |
---|---|---|
US embargo’s influence on investments and access to resources | Political/Economic | [16] |
Qualification of Cuba as a state sponsor of terrorism and a high-risk country | Political/Economic | [27,76,77,78] |
Growing concerns of investors (especially EU) on Cuba’s political support to Russia and opposition on NATO expansion (specifically due to Ukraine war) | Political | [64] |
Limited access to multilateral and international credits and financing | Political/Economic | [14,27] |
Cumbersome/extensive investment project approval process | Political/Economic | [31] |
Maintaining socialist ideology while decreasing state control and increasing FDI | Political | [14,82] |
Traditional planned economy dynamics structural challenges | Economic/Political | [14,41,83] |
Price volatility of oil due to global political unrest | Economic | [16] |
Increased project risk | Economic | [14,27,78] |
High levels of indebtedness | Economic | [27,83] |
High inflation | Economic | [81,82] |
Cuba is highly vulnerable due to dependency on few partner countries (China, Venezuela, Russia and the EU) | Economic | [30,64] |
Failure to meet requirements to access to international financing | Economic | [14,53,55,56] |
Brain drain of qualified and skilled professionals due to outward migration | Social/Technological/economic | [84,85,86] |
External vulnerabilities (natural and climate induced disasters, pandemics) | Environmental | [27,53] |
4. Discussion: Critical Challenges on the Way to 100% Renewables
- Translating the alignment and flexibility of the revised regulatory and policy framework into action. Although there are a lot of recent changes that support the renewables’ implementation, there are barriers in project approval processes, and unclear interactions between the roles and responsibilities of the governmental and non-governmental entities at national and subnational levels. This could be targeted by streamlining project applications and approvals in a transparent manner for international and national energy developers alike. These may necessitate a revision and redesign of some of the existing regulatory and legal frameworks mentioned in Section 3 to further promote active implementation of the energy transition.
- Tailor-fitting the RE investment possibilities for the right customers at different scales: (1) private developers/investors (both foreign and national); (2) multilateral and development financing institutions (e.g., World Bank, Interamerican Development Bank, IMF); (3) climate-focused investors and financing organizations (e.g., GCF, UN); (4) bilateral partners (e.g., EU, China); (5) smaller scale entities (e.g., local governments, energy entrepreneurs, cooperatives and citizens). This could be conducted by active engagement and collaboration and by ensuring an enabling environment in Cuba, in the region and internationally. It is also of utmost importance to build upon the past experiences (with successful past partnerships) to upscale the implantation of renewables to their full extent in the future.
- Improving the capacities, skills, understanding and tools on renewable energy to facilitate the absorptive capacities of institutions and individuals to work as change agents. These could include closer partnerships of universities with the private and public sector and local stakeholders in skills and knowledge development, sharing the best practices and fostering innovations. Equally important is to engage and interact with the national energy sector actors such as UNE, La Oficina Nacional para el Control al Uso Racional de la Energía (ONURE), Empresa de Fuentes Renovables de Energía (EMFRE) and research organizations such as (Centro de Investigacion de Energia (CIES) and CubaEnergia.
- Improving and modernizing the current energy infrastructure to support the transition towards renewables. The increase in the share of renewables in electricity production poses significant technical and financial challenges; these include automation of the dispatch and predictability of energy behavior, the reserve storage capacities (e.g., pumped hydro, Power to Gas to Power P2G2P, battery storages, flywheels), reduction in the distribution losses and losses in the energy/electricity value chain and improving access to RE technologies. The Cuban government has increasingly shown its vision towards 100% renewables; however, this should be backed by a multitude of studies and roadmaps showing how to get there. Here the availability and transparency of data are of crucial importance to examine various paths to renewables.
- Promoting incentives, subsidies and risk guarantees for RE investors. The investment portfolios, tax exemptions and benefits already in place should be explored further to attract the right investments at different scales. Incentives and risk guarantees with correctly priced feed-in tariffs can motivate energy developers at all scales. These supporting mechanisms together with the redesign of regulatory and legal guidelines are especially needed to reduce project risk, especially now with the weak Cuban peso and high inflation pushing the return of investment further into the future. Cuba has the potential to introduce prosumerism at all scales should there be innovative mechanisms in financing RE projects. These could include fully foreign direct investments, joint ventures, municipal cooperatives, small energy entrepreneurs, remittances of diaspora, cooperatives to remittances from Cuban diaspora and individuals promoting the shift to renewables.
- Accessing international investments, grants and loans. Cuba has been excluded from international financing mechanisms since the US embargo and has had to navigate its way through bilateral collaboration and private investments until recently. There are, however, some promising signs of Cuba accessing, e.g., climate change readiness financing, and collaboration agreements with the EU and bilateral partners (e.g., China). Moreover, the geopolitical location of Cuba in the heart of the Caribbean, between the Americas, can offer new opportunities in regional collaboration. The recent addition to the challenges come from the announcement of the US including Cuba on its list of States supporting terrorism and the political support of Russia during the Ukraine war. While there are some sanctions Cuba can do little about, there are possibilities to continue engagement and pressure against the US embargo. The Biden administration was expected to continue on the path initiated during the Obama administration and some rays of light can be seen in the easing of the sanctions. Here the role of the US government is inevitably crucial in accepting Cuba as a member of international financing institutions and ending the six-decade-long embargo.
5. Conclusions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Korkeakoski, M. State of Play for 100% Renewable Energy Futures for Cuba: Recent Changes and Challenges. Sustainability 2022, 14, 13825. https://doi.org/10.3390/su142113825
Korkeakoski M. State of Play for 100% Renewable Energy Futures for Cuba: Recent Changes and Challenges. Sustainability. 2022; 14(21):13825. https://doi.org/10.3390/su142113825
Chicago/Turabian StyleKorkeakoski, Mika. 2022. "State of Play for 100% Renewable Energy Futures for Cuba: Recent Changes and Challenges" Sustainability 14, no. 21: 13825. https://doi.org/10.3390/su142113825
APA StyleKorkeakoski, M. (2022). State of Play for 100% Renewable Energy Futures for Cuba: Recent Changes and Challenges. Sustainability, 14(21), 13825. https://doi.org/10.3390/su142113825