Minister of Energy and Business, Senator Lisa Cummins. (FP)

Barbados has made significant headway in its quest to have its first procurement project for battery energy storage systems.

Minister of Energy and Business, Senator Lisa Cummins, said tremendous work had been undertaken to get the team to this point. During a recent press conference, at the end of her Ministry’s three-day Procurement Design Workshop with key partners, she stated that the entire pipeline had been contemplated for the introduction of battery energy storage systems.  

Senator Cummins stated: “Based on the work that they (consortium of experts in storage systems) have already done, we can now identify where across the country we need to deploy battery energy storage systems in order to relieve congestion….

“The work is under way, and we’re closer now than we’ve ever been before to getting the first battery energy storage system.”

She explained that by deploying battery energy storage systems in the country, it would allow Government to treat to the broad issues on the grid, to create that stability and unlock, in this very first tranche of procurement, the first batch of persons whose licenses are awaiting connections to the grid.

Senator Cummins continued: “This is only the first batch of procurement. The expectation is that we will have subsequent procurement rounds, and we want to invite Barbadians to participate.”

 Co-founder and Chief Operations Officer of RELP, Mauro Soares, explained that the technical work was ongoing. He said they had been collecting information and building a model for grid characterisation which would allow the team to set the strategy going forward and to maximise the value of battery energy storage systems to the grid.

Mr. Soares continued: “So, hopefully in a few weeks, … the Ministry will be publishing some documentation that will have lots of details on what will be procured; where; what technologies will be available; questions for the market to address; [and there will be] the possibility of commenting on those documents.

“And that will give lots of information for investors, local developers to work around their projects and do their homework, to be ready to go for competitive bid submission. Hopefully, before the end of the year, we’ll have final documents and early next year we might have bid submission happen. And soon after that, all the projects will be financed and constructed so that we can solve this issue as soon as possible.” The three-day Procurement Design Workshop allowed the Ministry of Energy and Business and key partners to discuss and make critical decisions with regard to procuring battery energy storage systems. The cohorts included RELP, Global Energy Alliance for People and Planet, the Inter-American Development Bank, Deloitte, the National Renewable Energy Laboratory, and the International Finance Corporation.

sharon.austingill-moore@barbados.gov.bb

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