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posted by cmn32480 on Thursday December 24 2015, @04:26AM   Printer-friendly
from the admirable-achievement dept.

Costa Rica has shown the world what is possible this year by achieving 99 percent renewable energy generation. Michael wrote back in April that the country had not used any fossil fuels for electricity so far at that point in the year and, in fact, the Costa Rican Electricity Institute said in a statement that 285 days this year were fossil fuel-free.

Costa Rica is lucky to have a wealth of renewable energy sources to choose from. The bulk of its power generation comes from hydropower thanks to a large river system and heavy tropical rainfalls. The rest is made up of a mix of geothermal energy, which the country is also rich in, wind, biomass and solar power.

The institute said that even though 2015 was a very dry year, Costa Rica was still ahead of its renewable energy targets and goal of becoming carbon neutral by 2021. The country doesn't just want to hit 100 percent renewable energy, but it also wants to clean up energy consumption in general like moving the transportation sector away from fossil fuels and becoming less dependent on hydropower by adding more geothermal energy plants and harnessing energy from other sources.

The citizens of the country have benefited from the cost of energy actually falling by 12% this year and the institute expects it to keep falling in the future.

Imagine what a difference a 99% fossil-fuel free United States would make to geopolitics.


Prior coverage: Costa Rica Gets 100% of Its Power from Renewables for 1st Quarter of 2015.

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  • (Score: 4, Informative) by takyon on Thursday December 24 2015, @05:58AM

    by takyon (881) <{takyon} {at} {soylentnews.org}> on Thursday December 24 2015, @05:58AM (#280531) Journal

    This is just a sneak preview. As long as $/W of solar installation declines, it will continue to ramp up, even without government subsidies. Solar power generated grew [wikipedia.org] from 2.6 TWh in 2004 to 185.9 TWh in 2014. Fusion will come along in a few decades, maybe sooner if alternative approaches work. Coal will be history. Natural gas will linger until the end of the century depending on how successful fusion is.

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