By Dana Malcolm
Staff writer
#TurksandCaicos, June 19, 2023 – FortisTCI is committed to helping the Turks and Caicos break into the clean energy space but it won’t be an overnight process according to CEO Ruth Forbes.
“Recently at FortisTCI we have redefined our purpose which is to power the Turks and Caicos islands for a sustainable future, understanding that without sustainable energy there can be no sustainable development,” she said.
She listed the imperatives that are driving change in the energy sector as the THREE D’s
- Decarbonization
- Decentralization (having more distributed power systems across the grid)
- Digitization
Forbes explained that currently the world was going through a ‘trilemma’ as everyone tried to move to clean energy. They were faced with three major problems and the Turks and Caicos was no exception.
“We know that we want reliable power. Everyone wants affordable power and everyone wants to reduce the impact on the environment.”
The trilemma she explained was the balancing of these three ‘asks’. There were some cases, she explained, where a country could go for cheaper energy with a more negative Impact on the environment or go for protecting the environment but more expensive energy.
Despite the existence of the “trilemma,” Forbes said that there was a way to tick all of these boxes: slow sustained development that would take some amount of time, but produce the best result.
“One of the key takeaways is it takes time, it’s not going to happen overnight and it’s not going to happen by one person and we need our communities involved as well- taking the deliberate time and care to work through this transition understanding what is at stake.”
In the meantime, she maintained that the company was committed to working with all their partners, including the TCI Government for the good of residents.
“One of the challenges that we see around us is that this energy transition conversation is not localized, so we need to make this our problem. We are faced with unique issues that some islands are not faced with [for example] we import everything including fuel.”
She maintained that localizing the energy conservation conversation and creating TCI specific solutions would help the country better tackle energy shocks.