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Developer: US granted permit to project to bring electricity to Puerto Rico from Dominican Republic

The U.S. Department of Energy granted a permit to a $2.5 Billion?power project that will send electricity from the Dominican Republic to Puerto Rico, according to the company in charge of the development. They added that this would be the Caribbean’s first cross-border energy facility.

Puerto Rico is?plagued by widespread power outages? since Hurricane Maria, one of America's deadliest storms, decimated its electrical grid almost a decade ago.

Rafael Velez, President of the Puerto Rico-based Atabey Capital investment firm, the principal investor and founding investor for the project developer, said: "We are extremely excited to receive the presidential permit." It's the first time the project has been given the green light in terms of permits. Project Hostos is being developed by the Caribbean?Transmission & Development Company, which will receive private funding. A 500-megawatt natural gas-fired combined-cycle power plant is being built in San Pedro de Macoris as part of the?Project Hostos. The generating station would send power via three different power lines. A 90-kilometer cable will run from the plant to the coast, and a 150-kilometer submarine cable that spans the Mona Passage connecting the Dominican Republic with Puerto Rico.

The 6-kilometer cable will run from Mayaguez, Puerto Rico to connect with the Puerto Rico grid. It is mostly underground. The project will be able provide enough electricity for approximately?600,000.00 homes in Puerto Rico or more than a third of the island’s residents. Velez stated that the project is expected to start in 2031.

The Department of Energy granted the presidential permit to CTDC for the cross border portion of the project. This allowed CTDC to move forward with other permits, and an agreement on power purchase with the main Puerto Rico utility.

In 2017, storms, including Maria, killed 3,000 people. They also destroyed large areas of the island's infrastructure. Some parts of the island were without power for almost a year.

Velez said that he hopes Project 'Hostos' will boost the economic activity of Puerto Rico by stabilizing its 'power system'.

He said, "In Puerto Rico you cannot discuss economic development without electricity." "What we experienced with Maria - months without electricity - was like being back in the Stone Ages." Reporting by Laila K. Kearney, New York. Editing by David Gregorio

(source: Reuters)