News

Barack Obama’s New Caribbean Push

By: Caribbean Journal Staff - January 26, 2015

Above: US President Barack Obama

By Alexander Britell

It’s been six years since United States President Barack Obama made his first visit to the Caribbean, on the occasion of the Summit of the Americas in Port of Spain. And it’s been four since he visited Puerto Rico, his last visit to the region.

While Obama hasn’t made many visits to the nearby region, his administration has not been inactive, however, promoting plans like the wide-ranging Caribbean Basin Security Initiative and, more recently, his potentially transformative rapprochement with Cuba.

Now, with two years left in his term, it seems the Obama Administration is looking to ramp up its engagement with the region.

Now, the White House is ramping up that engagement with the Caribbean in a major new way: green energy.

It’s no secret that rising energy costs are increasingly a major economic threat to the region, and the White House, led by US Vice President Joe Biden, hosted a major regional summit on Monday directly aiming at the issue. Indeed, energy prices in the region are among the highest anywhere on earth.

Indeed, the region’s energy issues have been a talking point for former US President Bill Clinton, who has been an outspoken proponent of helping the Caribbean go green, as he said in a speech in Puerto Rico in 2013.

Toward that end, Biden hosted leaders from across the Caribbean in Washington, DC on Monday for the first-ever Caribbean Energy Security Summit.

The summit came after the launch of the Caribbean Energy Security Initiative in June of last year.

Monday’s summit included a collection of regional heads of government, multilateral development banks and other officials, along with Biden and Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz.

According to the White House, the summit “highlighted ongoing efforts under the CESI, including support for improved governance, enhanced access to finance, and increased donor coordination.”

Also on the agenda was a slew of new projects, led by a World Bank proposal to create a Caribbean Energy Investment Network to improve “energy and communication” between development partners in the region.

The White House announced that the US Overseas Private Investment Corporation would “intensify” its focus on developing green energy projects in the region, and OPIC and the State Department have identified a team with a specific responsibility for identifying and arranging projects in that vein.

Among other projects, the White House said that USAID would support a multi-year regional Caribbean programme to promote efficiency and integration of green energy into the islands’ grids.

Jamaica will see the largest effort in that regard with the planned Jamaica Clean Energy Programme, which “aims to establish the pre-conditions for clean energy development.”

And the White House’s new energy impetus will manifest itself in several other new ways: the Department of Energy, OPIC and the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory are working on a programme that would provide help for Caribbean hotels that reduce their energy and water footprints through green technology solutions.

In St Kitts and Nevis, which has been at the forefront of the regional green energy movement, particularly solar, the State Department will be supporting the development of the long-planned geothermal energy project in Nevis, among other US initiatives.

It remains to be seen how these initiatives will bear fruit; but what’s clear is that it’s much-needed American attention one of the Caribbean’s most pressing challenges.

But Caribbean leaders including CARICOM Chairman and Bahamas Prime Minister Perry Christie used the occasion to make a renewed call — for the President to continue his administration’s new engagement with an actual meeting with CARICOM, one that includes the President himself.

That follows a repeated call by Haiti President Michel Martelly, who has urged Obama and the US to hold a high-level CARICOM-US summit chaired by Obama.

Popular Posts the sexiest beaches including this resort at atlantis

The Sexiest Beaches in the Caribbean to Visit Right Now 

One is a beach with a nightclub-style pool right next door. Another is filled with beach bars — and even has its own au natural corner. Then there’s a beach that’s practically a nonstop party.  There are so many things that […]


The Winners of the 2024 Caribbean Green Awards 

caribbean green

With almost 20,000 votes, the winners of the Caribbean Green Awards 2024 Presented by E-Finity have been crowned.  From state-of-the-art marine conservation projects to hotels that are redefining sustainability, the Green movement has never been stronger in the Caribbean.  “This […]


A Low-Key, Lovely Adults-Only Beach Resort in Aruba

aruba beach resort adults-only

When Aruba’s Bucuti & Tara Beach Resort opened in 1987, it made sense for the hotel’s restaurant to be built in the shape of a boat shipwrecked on the sand: while Eagle Beach didn’t exactly resemble a desert island back […]


Related Posts

Bermuda's Hamilton Princess Resort: Here’s What You Need to Know. 

One of Bermuda’s premier resorts is welcoming back guests for the island’s peak season. The Hamilton Princess and Beach Club is welcoming back guests for the peak season.  The resort has also reopened its signature eatery, 1609, with a fresh […]


In Caribbean Luxury Real Estate Market, a Shift Toward Gated Communities 

south bank turks

Single family homes in the Caribbean are particularly popular these days for those looking for secure villas and enclaves, real estate experts say. And the emphasis is on security. “While Turks and Caicos Islands are exceptionally safe as a British […]


This Top Anguilla Resort Has a New Director of Sales 

malliouhana

One of Anguilla’s premier luxury resorts has named a new director of sales, Caribbean Travel Advisor has learned. The Malliouhana resort has named Daniela Victoria as its new director of sales. In the role, Victoria will manage the sales teams […]


SUBSCRIBE!

Sign up for Caribbean Journal's free newsletter for a daily dose of beaches, hotels, rum and the best Caribbean travel information on the net.


No. Thank You