Monday, February 02, 2009



The Dominican government has further demonstrated its commitment to sustainable development by signing an agreement with U.S. firm Sunovia Energy Technologies for the installation of the country's first solar energy plant.


The contract, signed within the scope of a Dominican law providing incentives for foreign investment, will involve an investment of roughly $200 million and provide jobs to some 2,500 workers.


"President Leonel Fernandez and his team have shown a tremendous passion for solving the country's energy difficulties; they've realized that having a bilateral focus, including the responsible production of renewable energy, and adopting practices that conserve energy are critical steps that must be taken if the country is to achieve energy independence in the long term," Sunovia Energy Technologies CEO Carl Smith said.


For his part, Eddy Martinez, secretary of state and executive director of the Dominican Republic's Export and Investment Center, said the agreement "is the result of the intense work we've carried out for years, in keeping with the worldwide trend of reducing dependence on crude and, at the same time, creating new jobs and attracting new investment to the (country)."

The contract signed with Sunovia Energy Technologies is part of a wave of new investment in renewable energy in the Dominican Republic that also involves other U.S. companies such as Masada Resource Group, STC Engineering and Burbano Recycling, which have set up electricity and bio-fuels plants.


Martinez said, meanwhile, that his country not only wants to attract investors in renewable energy, but also to expand investment in the stem-cell research and genetically modified foods sectors and in the development of hybrid vehicles.

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