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© 2025 Island Innovation. All rights reserved.

    News

    Curated stories and analysis from islands and sustainability leaders worldwide.

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    Showing 9 of 166 news items in Energy & Transport
    Hon. Albert Bryan Jr., Governor, U.S. Virgin Islands, to Speak at Sustainability Summit in St. Kitts and Nevis
    Energy & TransportMay 1, 2025

    Hon. Albert Bryan Jr., Governor, U.S. Virgin Islands, to Speak at Sustainability Summit in St. Kitts and Nevis

    With less than two months left before the start of the 2025 Global Sustainable Islands Summit co-hosted by Island Innovation and the Government of St Kitts and Nevis, preparations are well underway across the Twin Islands. The summit includes specialized Forums aimed at empowering island communities and highlighting local projects having a global impact: the Island Youth Forum (May 25-26, St Kitts), Geothermal Energy Forum (May 26, Nevis), and the 1st Forum on Access to Climate Finance for Sub-National Island Jurisdictions (May 30, Nevis).

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    Madagascar’s ‘Solar mamas’ are Lighting the Way
    Energy & TransportApril 22, 2025

    Madagascar’s ‘Solar mamas’ are Lighting the Way

    In the heart of Madagascar’s Menabe region — a biodiversity hotspot renowned for its sprawling mangroves, rare dry forests, and endemic species — a quiet revolution is unfolding. Here, in the village of Ambakivao, four women are tackling two of the region’s most pressing challenges: energy access and environmental degradation. Known locally as the “solar grandmothers,” Remeza, Kingeline, Yollande, and Hanitra are bringing light to their community, one solar lamp at a time, while also protecting Madagascar’s fragile ecosystems. Like much of rural Madagascar, where less than 15% of households have access to electricity, Ambakivao has long relied on petroleum lamps to illuminate its homes after dark. These dim, smoky lamps come with a steep cost: respiratory illnesses, fire hazards, and a dependence on expensive, imported fuel. Here, as in so many villages across the country, darkness limits opportunity. “We had always used petroleum-filled lamps, producing smokes that made our children ill and polluted the air,” Hanitra told WWF. Today, however, solar lamps are brightening their homes, enabling children to study at night and families to work together in the evening. The transformation has been profound. “With this solar technology, humans are feeling good, and nature also. It doesn’t smoke and doesn’t smell bad,” Hanitra said.

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    OECS launches publication on geothermal development in East Caribbean
    Energy & TransportApril 16, 2025

    OECS launches publication on geothermal development in East Caribbean

    The[Organisation of Eastern Caribbean States](https://oecs.int/en/) (OECS) Commission has launched **“**[Power Below The Surface: Harnessing Geothermal Energy in the OECS](https://bit.ly/powerbelowthesurfaceflipbook)“, a publication that details the current status of geothermal development in the Eastern Caribbean and provides an outlook for the future of this sector. The booklet was launched in a special “OECS sustainable energy celebration” at the climax of the 3rd Nationally Determined Contributions Investment Forum and Marketplace, held at the Radisson Grenada Beach Resort from March 31 to April 2. It was formally presented to Hon. Konris Maynard of St Kitts and Nevis, the current chair of the OECS Council of Ministers: Energy by Dr. Ernie Stapleton, OECS GEOBUILD’s Project Manager. This comprehensive, 48-page publication, developed under the OECS Geothermal Energy: Capacity Building for Utilisation, Investment and Local Development ([GEOBUILD](https://oecs.int/en/geobuild)) Programme, details the current status of geothermal projects across the region, from [Dominica’s advanced 10-MW power plant development](https://www.thinkgeoenergy.com/dominica-pm-provides-update-on-construction-of-laudat-geothermal-power-plant/) scheduled for completion in December 2025 to emerging projects in four other Member States: [Grenada](https://www.thinkgeoenergy.com/grenada-geothermal-project-receives-further-funding-support-from-cbd-and-uk-fcdo/), [Saint Kitts and Nevis](https://www.thinkgeoenergy.com/nevis-geothermal-project-going-into-bidding-process-for-drilling/), [Saint Lucia](https://www.thinkgeoenergy.com/world-bank-to-support-geothermal-exploration-at-saint-lucia-caribbean/), and [St Vincent and the Grenadines](https://www.thinkgeoenergy.com/st-vincents-grenadines-officials-reassure-support-of-geothermal-project/). The booklet also addresses key aspects of geothermal development, including environmental benefits, economic advantages, and various technological approaches to geothermal power generation.

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    Sidlak: Sustaining solar in Cebu’s isolated islands – A Documentary
    Energy & TransportApril 7, 2025

    Sidlak: Sustaining solar in Cebu’s isolated islands – A Documentary

    Excerpt and Photo from rappler.com In the islands of Olango, Cebu, [renewable energy](https://www.rappler.com/topic/renewable-energy/) and wildlife conservation work hand in hand. The Olango Island Wildlife Sanctuary (OIWS), the country’s first Ramsar Wetland of International Importance, is a vital stopover for 60 species of migratory shorebirds that travel within the East Asian-Australian Flyway. The sanctuary is fully energized with the help of solar power energy. According to OIWS warden Cristino Patigdas, the use of solar power panels has helped in reducing the costs of their operations and removing the need for loud gas-powered generators and transmission lines that get in the way of birds flying in the sanctuary. Many advocacy groups, nonprofit organizations, and government agencies have also ventured into supporting the isolated barangays of Olango’s smaller islands by providing them with solar panel units. However, with the lack of solar panel maintenance stations and a proper e-waste disposal policy, Olango residents may find themselves with an impending public health problem and bigger waste concerns. Watch this documentary by John Sitchon on Olango Islands’ struggle with [clean energy transition](https://www.rappler.com/newsbreak/explainers/things-to-know-just-energy-transition/) and the challenges of sustainable technology in isolated island communities.

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    Greece’s first solar panel recycling machine installed in Crete
    Energy & TransportApril 7, 2025

    Greece’s first solar panel recycling machine installed in Crete

    Photo: Katheris. Retrieved from balkangreenenergynews.com Greek company Katheris said it installed the country’s first solar panel recycling machine. As one of few such endeavors in entire Southeastern Europe, the business move could contribute to the development of a lucrative market that would ease environmental and climate impact. Repairing and recycling solar panels is limited, and landfilling is still a common practice throughout the world. Photovoltaic waste is expected to reach 4% to 14% of total electricity production capacity by 2030 and rise to as much as 60 to 80 million tons by 2050. Katheris, a recycling company based in Herakleion (Heraklion), the capital of Crete, Greece’s largest island, saw an opportunity in solar panel waste. PV modules contain valuable materials, of which silver, crystalline silicon, aluminum and copper are the most valuable. There are also toxic heavy metals inside, a major environmental risk. Before modular designs become standardized so panels can be dismantled easily, the development of a recycling market will likely remain slow. Landfilling is cheap when there are no strict regulations for such electronic waste, and recovering separate materials is costly.

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    Reimagining the Electricity Sector in Island Nations with Virtual Power Plants
    Energy & TransportApril 7, 2025

    Reimagining the Electricity Sector in Island Nations with Virtual Power Plants

    Excerpt and Photo from rmi.org Distributed virtual power plants (VPPs) can revolutionize the Caribbean’s energy landscape. These networks of decentralized and distributed energy sources (DERs) are aggregated and actively controlled by a VPP aggregator, enabling hundreds or thousands of devices to operate as a unified system offering an innovative solution to the region’s energy challenges. Many island nations remain heavily dependent on expensive, imported and polluting fossil fuels for electricity generation, leaving them vulnerable to volatile global fuel prices and frequent power outages due to aging grid infrastructure. Climate change further exacerbates these challenges, with hurricanes posing a constant threat to power systems and economic stability. However, VPPs offer a promising solution by aggregating distributed energy resources such as rooftop solar panels and battery energy storage systems, as well as flexible loads like electric vehicle chargers and smart thermostats, to provide energy, capacity, or ancillary services to the grid through the VPP aggregator. By increasing the contributions of decentralized and distributed energy resources, VPPs can enhance energy resilience, reduce electricity system costs, and provide greater flexibility for electricity generation and ancillary services requirements on the grid. This report presents an in-depth analysis of these benefits, using a case study from the US Virgin Islands (USVI) to demonstrate how VPPs can stabilize the grid to enhance energy resilience and bolster disaster preparedness, while also improving overall system affordability and flexibility.

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    Namayingo islands women crossing treacherous lake for childbirth
    Energy & TransportMarch 31, 2025

    Namayingo islands women crossing treacherous lake for childbirth

    Photo courtesy of Betty Angatai. Retrieved from newvision.co.ug When Esther Atieno started feeling sharp pain, she did not know that she was in labour, considering that she still had three weeks to the expected date of delivery. Atieno assumed it was just normal discomfort or the baby shifting position in the womb. However, the pain intensified, leaving her paralysed. At about 10:00pm, a boat was got to rush Atieno, a resident of Lake Victoria’s Wayasi island in Namayingo district, to the health facility on Mageta Island across the border in Kenya. The baby could not wait: Atieno gave birth in the middle of Lake Victoria without assistance from a midwife and proper materials for childbirth. “I had nothing to use during delivery. We had to cut the baby’s umbilical cord with a piece of iron sheet that was patched onto the boat,” Atieno says. The dire situation was compounded by the heavy downpour immediately after giving birth. “We put the baby in a tin we normally use to scoop water from the wooden boat, hoping to keep the newborn warm,” she recalls.

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    Bicycle revolution underway on Torres Strait’s Thursday Island
    Energy & TransportMarch 31, 2025

    Bicycle revolution underway on Torres Strait’s Thursday Island

    Photo Supplied: Sarah Tedder. Retrieved from abc.net.au On the face of it, bicycles should be a great way to get around on Thursday Island, or “TI”, in the Torres Strait. The 3.5-square-kilometre tropical island has a designated cycleway and most things are a five to 10-minute ride away. There is no public transport and [fuel prices — $2.55 a litre for unleaded — are among the highest in the country](https://www.abc.net.au/news/2023-11-22/cost-of-living-crisis-in-torres-strait-cape-york-gulf/103108608). But after moving her young family to TI from New South Wales in 2023, Sarah Tedder was struck by the lack of people pedalling around. “As I was riding around with my kids, I just wasn’t seeing many other bikes at all,” she said. It turned out bicycles just weren’t a thing on TI. There was no bike shop on the island and shipping them from Cairns, the nearest mainland city more than 1,000 kilometres away, was expensive. After surveying community members nearly a year ago, Ms Tedder found while some kids had a bike, it was a different story for adults, with many relying on taxis to get their children to school or run errands.

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    Olutanga Island banks on hydrogen power to end years of blackouts
    Energy & TransportMarch 31, 2025

    Olutanga Island banks on hydrogen power to end years of blackouts

    Photo courtesy of Antonio Manaytay/Rappler Separated by a strait from the mainland of Zamboanga Sibugay, Olutanga Island is a place of breathtaking beauty, where turquoise waters meet lush green landscapes. But behind its idyllic scenery lies a community grappling with a persistent and crippling energy crisis. For years, residents have endured daily power interruptions lasting anywhere from two to eight hours, a problem that has stifled growth, disrupted lives, and left many feeling forgotten. “We have grown accustomed to living our lives in the comfort of the ordinary,” said Joseph Sumayo, brother of the village chief of Barangay Sagay in Talusan town. But now, a glimmer of hope has emerged in the form of a proposed hydrogen power plant, promising to bring stable and sustainable energy to the island. While the project offers a vision of a brighter future, not everyone is hopeful it will deliver on its promises.

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