The high and volatile price of electricity is the most important issue in the energy sector.Electricity prices in the Caribbean are among the highest in the world, and they fluctuate greatly with the global price of oil.The primary cause of the high cost of electricity is that most Caribbean countries use diesel and heavy fuel oil for electricity generation.These fuels are expensive and their prices fluctuate greatly based on the global price of oil.
The table below shows average tariffs for 2010, 2011, and 2012 for utilities in numerous countries. The table shows that T&T and Suriname have the lowest average tariffs, followed by the Dominican Republic.The table at left shows that all other Caribbean countries have significantly higher average tariffs, at levels above US$0.30 per kilowatt/hour.There is an inseparable linkage between the fiscal crisis confronting the Caribbean region and the reality of paying some of the world's highest per capita energy costs.
The countries in the region are encumbered with the necessity of importing increasingly expensive oil products for transportation and electricity generation.Covering the ever-increasing cost of energy places enormous pressure on countries whose national budgets are already heavily indebted.Thus, a new Caribbean energy future is needed.
Caribbean leaders in the public and private sectors must focus on taking full advantage of the region's wealth of renewable energy resources, maximising energy efficiency, and adapting recent developments in natural gas technology and supply to transform the Caribbean's energy market.On December 5, the IDB is hosting a regional, ministerial-level energy conference in Washington, DC entitled, The Caribbean's Energy Future: A Pathway to Regional Fiscal Stability.
The key objectives of this one-day event are to provide a forum to examine the issues associated with the region's high energy costs and associated impacts; explore options for addressing this problem; and, set forth a roadmap that will assist the region in developing a cleaner, more cost effective, and sustainable energy matrix.
As an honest broker in the region, the IDB seeks to assist the Caribbean in making the necessary changes in policy co-ordination, financial structuring, and infrastructure transformation that will usher in this new energy future for the region.This conference is but one small yet crucial step in this transformational process.
IDB