Ukraine is seeking U.S. investment in its biomass, wind and
solar power industries. The idea is to use renewable energy to
curb its reliance on fuel imports from Russia, which annexed
Ukraine’s Crimea region last month and has troops massed on the
border. “Russia’s aggression towards Ukraine indeed brought energy
security concerns to the fore,” Olexander Motsyk, Ukraine’s
ambassador to the U.S. said at a renewable-energy conference at
his country’s embassy in Washington yesterday. “I strongly
believe the time has come for U.S. investors to discover
Ukraine, especially its energy.”
Yesterday’s event was the start of a “road show” to
highlight Ukraine’s renewable-energy potential, Volodymyr
Shalkivski, the embassy’s first secretary for energy issues,
said in an interview. Future events will be held at Ukraine’s
consulates in Chicago, New York and San Francisco, he said. Ukraine relies on Russian natural gas for heat and electric
power. U.S. and European officials have been searching for ways
to help Ukraine limit this dependence, including expediting U.S.
approvals of facilities to export liquefied natural gas.
Russia will demand Ukraine pay in advance for natural-gas
deliveries in a month unless the latter nation resumes payments,
a move that may lead to disruptions in fuel supplies to Europe,
President Vladimir Putin said yesterday during an annual
televised call-in show.
40,000 Troops
Pro-Russian separatists have seized government buildings in
eastern Ukraine and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization
estimates that 40,000 Russian troops are amassed on the border.
The conflict has sparked the biggest standoff between the U.S.
and Russia since the Cold War, and the U.S. and its European
allies have threatened further sanctions if Russia doesn’t calm
the situation. Talks in Geneva between Russia, Ukraine, the U.S. and the
28-nation EU yesterday ended with an accord to help de-escalate
the conflict, after Putin said he hopes he won’t have to send in
troops. As leaders seek to reduce tensions, Ukrainian officials say
one way to replace Russian gas is through home-grown renewable
energy production. Motsyk said the U.S. and the EU should
consider strategic partnerships to invest in the country, while
acknowledging the inherent risk, given the economic and security
climate.
Capital Needed
“The resources are there,” though a major challenge is
attracting capital, Todd Foley, senior vice president for policy
and government relations at the American Council on Renewable
Energy, said at the embassy conference. The Washington-based
nonprofit group co-hosted the event, along with the Energy
Industry Research Center, a Kiev-based consultancy. According to the research center, biomass and biogas are
the most promising forms of renewable energy for Ukraine, in
part because the nation’s network of electric-power lines and
substations can’t easily adjust to the addition of significant
amounts of wind and solar energy. Biomass may help replace natural gas used in the nation’s
24,000 boiler plants, officials from the Energy Industry
Research Center said.
Boiler Makers
Vadym Glamazdin, the center’s managing director, said
Ukraine is seeking strategic partnerships with U.S. businesses,
though it hasn’t identified potential companies. Babcock &
Wilcox Co. (BWC), based in Charlotte, North Carolina, and closely held
Hurst Boiler & Welding Co. of Coolidge, Georgia, are among
companies that make boilers. Babcock & Wilcox , which didn’t have representatives at
yesterday’s conference, has been working closely with the
Ukrainian government to explore a fuel switch from natural gas
to coal, Patrick Wilson, the company’s director of government
affairs for energy, said in a phone interview. He said the
company has proposed a five-plant pilot project worth $1 billion
to convert the fuel.“The number one reason for making the fuel switch is to
increase the energy security of Ukraine,” Wilson said in a
phone interview. Clean-coal technology can replace some of
Ukraine’s inefficient natural gas plants, providing a bridge to
renewable fuels, he said.Glamazdin of the Energy Industry Research Center said
Ukraine’s heating supply accounts for about 40 percent of all
gas imported from Russia, which could be replaced with renewable
energy within three to five years.By 2030, renewables could account for about 15 percent of
Ukraine’s electricity supply, up from about 2 percent now, with
adequate investment, he said.
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