What happens after your country runs on 99 percent renewable electricity?
What happens after your country runs on 99 percent renewable electricity? The Verge
Costa Rica gets more than 99 percent of its electricity from renewables — it’s still not enough.
While most of the world still runs on dirty fossil fuels, Costa Rica has generated nearly all of its electricity from renewable sources of energy for nearly a decade. For comparison, the US generates just over 20 percent of its electricity from renewable sources.
Costa Rica made global headlines in 2015 for generating 100 percent of its electricity from renewable energy for 75 days in a row. Today, it consistently gets around 99 percent of its electricity from renewables. Even so, it’s not a perfect system. Climate change poses new risks to the power grid, and Costa Rica has a lot of work left to do to get more solar and wind farms online.
The Verge spoke with Kenneth Lobo Méndez, director of planning and sustainability in electricity management, and Marco Jiménez Chavez, an engineer who works on generation expansion planning at the state-run electricity utility Instituto Costarricense de Electricidad (ICE). We wanted to know what’s led to the country’s success with renewable energy and what problems it has to troubleshoot now in a warming world.
This interview has been edited for length and clarity, and most of the conversation was interpreted from Spanish to English.
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