“So,
we are on a mission,… that has been joined by the stakeholders in JPS, our
partners at CMI and, we hope, now, the entire country, as we…pursue this major
effort of Energy conservation and efficiency and to make Jamaica a better place
for us all
Minister of Science,
Technology, Energy and Mining Minister, Hon. Phillip Paulwell on Tuesday
December 2nd 2014 during a ceremony along the Palisadoes Road to Commission
some 200 Streetlights retrofitted with Streetlights
Christmas
will be brighter for the people who ply the Palisados Highway from the Norman
Manley International Airport thanks to some new LED (Light Emitting Diodes)
Streetlights. Rockfort and Port Royal in East Kingston is now gonna be a really
hard place to commit a Crime!
This
is all thanks to the Engineers at the CMI (Caribbean Maritime Institute) who
are on the final lap of completing their retrofitting and upgrade of some two
hundred (200) Streetlights along the Palisados Highway at a cost of some JA$5.1
million as reported by the Horses' mouth aka the Jamaica
Information Service in the article “LED
Street Lights Installed Along Palisadoes Roadway”, published December 4,
2014 By Douglas McIntosh, Jamaica Information
Service.
The
Lights were symbolically commissioned into service by the Minister of Science,
Technology, Energy and Mining Minister, Hon. Phillip Paulwell on Tuesday
December 2nd 2014 during a ceremony along the Palisadoes Road. The
Engineers at CMI have completed some one hundred and eighty (180) Streetlights
with another twenty (20) to go before Christmas 2014 starts and preferably
before the start of 2015, the Year of the Sheep.
The
project was jointly undertaken by the following entities:
1. Ministry
of Science, Technology, Energy, and Mining
2. CMI
(Caribbean Maritime Institute)
3. JPS
(Jamaica Public Service Company)
The
project to retrofit the Ballast and other Electronic parts of the Streetlight
that power the HPS (High Pressure
Sodium) Bulbs and convert them to power LED's actually started back in 2013
with just 30 Streetlights being retrofitted as noted in my blog article
entitled “JPSCo
and CMI to retrofit Streetlights with LED Lightbulbs - Fixing Day Burning
Streetlights as Ban on Incandescent Bulbs needed”.
JPS Co Streetlights can
all be upgraded to LED - Solar Powered Streetlights and Traffic Lights is the
Next Step
So
will this project be expanded to the rest of Jamaica?
Not
so sure about that as this appears to be just an isolate project spearheaded by
the GOJ in partnership with these stakeholders. But if retrofitting the
Streetlights is that easy, it'll be fairly easy to secure more funding to
expand the project. There are some 93,000 Street that cost the GOJ some JA$2.8
Billion in Electricity Bills per annum.
To
retrofit that many streetlights, based on the cost of this single project,
would be approximately JA$2,325,000,000 or US$20,547,944.93. That's roughly the
same amount of money that's being languished on paying the Electricity Bill to
the JPS Co, who they already owe millions in unpaid bills for Day Burning
Streetlights since 2011.
This
as pointed out by JPS Co Corporate Communications Manager Winsome Callum in my blog article
entitled “Alternative
Energy Contract for JPS Co Streetlight Upgrade Coming - JPS Co Winsome Callum's
Bourne Supremacy”.
Already,
Minister of Science, Technology, Energy and Mining Minister, Hon. Phillip
Paulwell has hinted that this may be coming in 2015 during the ceremony along
the Palisadoes Road. He made mention of some US$20 million borrowed from the
IDB (Inter-American Development Bank), possibly taken from the same US$140
million announced in February 2014 as stated in the article “IDB
approves US$140 million in new loans to Jamaica”, published Friday, February
07, 2014, The Jamaica Observer.
He
also made reference to some US$4.5 million earmarked from a sum of US$105
million borrowed from the World Bank to be used to get the MSME (Micro, Small
and Medium Enterprise) Businesses to
implement Energy efficient solutions as part of their best Business practices
as noted in my blog
article entitled “Jamaica's
World Bank's US$105 million Loan – All My Children Animation, SME VC's and
Public Sector get Second Chance at Economic Redemption”.
So
will some of those monies from the World Bank and the IDB be funneled to take
the campaign to retrofit the 93,000 Streetlights islandwide? And will it also
include Solar or Wind Power, thereby taking the Streetlights and potentially
the Traffic Lights off the JPS Co Grid and make money by selling excess power
to the JPS Co Grid as well?
Exciting
times come 2015 when the CMI Complete this Streetlight Retrofit Project and the
Dim Orange glow of the HPS streetlight is replaced by the bright Cool White of
LED Bulbs in 2015, the Year of the Sheep.
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