Belize Launches $58.4M Project to Enhance Energy Supply and
The Belize Energy Resilience and Sustainability Project helps address energy challenges by installing modern battery storage systems at four critical locations.
Belize's energy sector is looking to expand in biomass and small-scale solar, as well as create new opportunities in electric vehicles, large-scale solar, liquefied natural gas (LNG), and waste-to-energy. However, Belize remains a net-importer of electricity from Mexico, which makes energy imports expensive and unpredictable.
In Belize, almost half the energy comes from hydroelectric power and biomass. The rest is produced by domestic independent power producers (IPPs) and a Mexican utility, with IPPs contributing about 55.6% of the country's electrical needs.
Belize has good to moderate land-based wind resources (Class 3–4). Full solar and biomass resource assessments are unavailable. The country's current hydroelectric capacity includes 25.5 MW at the Mollejon Hydro Plant, 7.0 MW at the Chalillo Hydroelectric Dam Plant, 19 MW at the Vaca Hydroelectric Facilities, and 3.5 MW at the HydroMaya Dam.
Belize uses solar power on a smaller scale, with the Government having installed solar micro-grids and solar-powered streetlights in rural communities not yet connected to the national grid. The Government of Belize, along with Belize Electricity Limited (BEL), intends to launch a pilot project introducing electric vehicles.
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