On South America's largest solar farm,
Chinese power radiates
Send a link to a friend
[April 23, 2019]
By Cassandra Garrison
JUJUY, Argentina (Reuters) - In an arid,
lunar-like landscape in the sunny highlands of northern Argentina, South
America's largest solar farm is rising, powered by funding and
technology from China.
Local officials said they had sought help at home, the United States and
Europe without success. Potential lenders and partners, they said, were
spooked by the project's size and the fiscal woes of Jujuy province, one
of the poorest in the country.
The Import-Export Bank of China saw it differently. The state-funded
institution financed 85 percent of the project's nearly $400-million
pricetag. At 3 percent annual interest over 15 years, it is "cheap
money" for Jujuy, a person familiar with the terms said. The catch: the
province had to purchase nearly 80 percent of the materials from Chinese
suppliers.
Those companies include Huawei Technologies, the Chinese telecom giant
under fire from U.S. President Donald Trump. Some in his administration
have concluded, without presenting evidence, that Huawei's equipment
provides the Chinese military with a "backdoor" to spy on users or
cripple their networks. In Jujuy, the company is supplying inverters,
technology that turns power from solar panels into useable current and
serves as a critical gateway to the electrical grid.
The project, known as Cauchari, is a testament to the rising clout of
Beijing as a backer of big projects in cash-strapped emerging markets.
And it is helping China cement its standing as the world's leader in
clean-energy technology.
At a time when Trump is doubling down on fossil fuels and withdrawing
the United States from global partnerships, Chinese President Xi
Jinping's sprawling "Belt and Road" initiative aims to put Chinese
companies and innovation at the center of infrastructure development
worldwide, including next-generation power sources.
"It is a way of expanding China's growing global presence and dominant
economic force, and it progressively reorients the world from the U.S.
and European-centric view of the last fifty years," said Tim Buckley,
director for the U.S-based Institute for Energy Economics and Financial
Analysis.
(For a graphic on China's solar strength, see https://tmsnrt.rs/2IBwZJD)
The trend is rattling Trump administration officials.
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, speaking April 12 in Santiago, Chile on
a tour of South America, slammed China's "predatory" lending practices,
which critics say leave borrowers beholden to Beijing.
He warned repeatedly that Chinese technology, including equipment made
by Huawei, poses a security risk that could affect information sharing
by the United States.
"It is not okay to put technology systems in with latent capability to
take information from citizens of Chile or any other country and
transfer it back to President Xi's government," Pompeo said.
But in hardscrabble Jujuy province, home to around 750,000 people,
officials are in no mood for a scolding. Argentina has set ambitious
renewable energy targets. It is China, they say, not the United States,
that is stepping up with money and technology to assist them.
"China...was the one that more generously opened its doors to finance
this project," Carlos Oehler, president of Jujuy's energy agency JEMSE,
told Reuters in an interview in the provincial capital of San Salvador.
Goodwill from the solar deal has led Jujuy to make purchases from other
Chinese vendors, including a contract for surveillance equipment.
Governor Gerardo Morales told Reuters that Jujuy and the southern
Chinese province of Guizhou have established a "brotherhood"
relationship that he is optimistic will lead to more tie-ups.
"We have received visits from many Chinese companies," Morales said.
Huawei, the world's biggest supplier of solar inverters, has repeatedly
denied it poses any security risks. The company said in a statement it
would continue to provide its customers with "innovative, trusted and
secure solutions."
POWERED BY CHINA
At more than 4,000 meters above sea level, Cauchari is one of the
highest solar farms in the world. Reuters is among the few media outlets
ever to see it. Rows of panels stretch toward the horizon, while boxes
of still-packed equipment wait to be installed. Visitors check in at an
on-site clinic to have their blood pressure and heart rates monitored
because of the risk of altitude sickness.
[to top of second column]
|
Guillermo Giralt, technical director of Cauchari Solar, stands next
to solar panels at a solar farm, built on the back of funding and
technology from China, in Salar de Cauchari, Argentina, April 3,
2019. Picture taken April 3, 2019. REUTERS/Miguel Lobianco
Expected to begin sending current to the grid in August, the
facility will generate up to 300 megawatts of electricity, enough to
power 120,000 homes. A planned expansion to 500MW would boost that
to 260,000 homes and bring the project's total cost to $551 million,
provincial officials said.
On the windy dirt track leading to the construction site, signs in
Spanish and Mandarin proclaim the involvement of state-owned
PowerChina construction company and equipment manufacturer Shanghai
Electric.
It is yet another indicator of Beijing's rising influence in the
region. China is the top buyer of South American soybeans, iron ore
and other commodities, while Chinese investors are snapping up
stakes in key sectors such as energy.
In Argentina alone, China has financed hydroelectric dams and wind
farms, and the government is in talks for a Beijing-bankrolled
nuclear power project, potentially using China's own Hualong One
reactor design. China has invested some $5.7 billion in energy
projects in Argentina since 2000, according to data compiled by the
Global Development Policy Center at Boston University.
Argentina's U.S.-educated President Mauricio Macri attended China's
first Belt and Road Forum in Beijing in 2017, a signal of the
tightening embrace between the two nations. A number of Latin
American officials are expected to be at the second forum later this
month in the Chinese capital.
China has spent more than $244 billion on energy projects worldwide
since 2000, a quarter of that in Latin America, according to the
Global Development Policy Center data. While the vast majority of
that capital has flowed to oil, gas and coal assets, China has been
the largest investor in clean energy globally for nine straight
years, according to the Chinese embassy in Buenos Aires.
China is the world's largest manufacturer of solar panels and
inverters, dominance that has seen European and U.S. producers
struggle to compete. The Trump administration last year slapped
steep tariffs on imported panels, citing unfair competition. But
many renewable energy experts credit falling prices for speeding
global adoption of solar.
So has China's willingness to finance clean-energy projects in the
developing world, opening doors for other Chinese firms. In Jujuy
province, for example, the local government inked a deal with
Chinese tech giant ZTE to supply it with fiber optic
telecommunications systems and hundreds of surveillance cameras in
the wake of the solar project.
"(Cauchari) paved the way - a highway - for all other projects," a
person familiar with the situation told Reuters.
Jujuy's pivot to China underscores the challenge for the United
States, whose warnings about the pitfalls of Chinese backing are no
match for Beijing's outreach and resources.
Jujuy Governor Morales recently traveled to China to discuss the
Cauchari expansion with PowerChina and the Import-Export Bank of
China, one of several trips local officials have made to the Asian
nation over the past few years.
Jujuy, with its soon-to-be launched clean power and low seismic
risk, is trying to position itself as an attractive location for
companies to place their data centers. Morales said Chinese
universities in Guizhou are helping Jujuy scale the learning curve,
attention for which the long-ignored province is grateful.
"Suddenly Jujuy is recognized in China," Morales said. "We have a
path open there."
(Reporting by Cassandra Garrison; Editing by Adam Jourdan and Marla
Dickerson)
[© 2019 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2019 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|