Electricity sector in Bolivia

The electricity sector in Bolivia is dominated by the state-owned ENDE Corporation (Empresa Nacional de Electricidad), although the private Bolivian Power Company (Compañia Boliviana de Energía Eléctrica; COBEE) is also a major producer of electricity. ENDE had been unbundled into generation, transmission and distribution and privatized in the 1990s, but most of the sector was re-nationalized in 2010 (generation) and 2012 (transmission and distribution).

Electricity sector of Bolivia
Data
Electricity coverage (2003)67% (total), 28% (rural); (LAC total average in 2007: 92%)
Installed capacity (2006)1.43 GW
Share of fossil energy60%
Share of renewable energy40% (hydro)
GHG emissions from electricity generation (1994)0.19 t CO2e per capita
Average electricity use (2006)588 kWh per capita
Distribution losses (2005)10%; (LAC average in 2005: 13.6%)
Consumption by sector
(% of total)
Residential40%
Industrial28%
Tariffs and financing
Average residential tariff
(US$/kW·h, 2006)
0.0614; (LAC average in 2005: 0.115)
Average industrial tariff
(US$/kW·h, 2006)
0.0404 (LAC average in 2005: 0.107)
Annual investment in electricityUS$40 million
Share of government financing (2004)50%
Services
Sector unbundlingYes
Share of private sector in generation100% (in the SIN-National Interconnected System)
Share of private sector in distribution100% (in the SIN)
Competitive supply to large usersNo (regional distribution monopolies)
Competitive supply to residential usersNo
Institutions
No. of service providers3 (generation), 3 (distribution)
Responsibility for transmission2 (Transportadora de Electricidad, ISA Bolivia)
Responsibility for regulationMulti-sector national regulator
Responsibility for policy-settingViceministry of Electricity and Alternative Energy
Responsibility for the environmentLand Planning and Environment Vice-Ministry
Electricity sector lawYes (1994)
Renewable energy lawNo
CDM transactions related to the electricity sector1 registered CDM project; 141,691 t CO2e annual emissions reductions

The supply is dominated by thermal generation (65%), while hydropower (35%) has a smaller share in its generation mix compared to other South American countries. (Latin America and the Caribbean, or LAC, average hydropower capacity is 51%.) In 2014, national electricity supply of 1580.35 MW comfortably exceeded the 1298.2 MW maximum demand. Like in other countries, Bolivia's electricity sector consists of a National Interconnected System (SIN) and off-grid systems (known as the Aislado).

The national government's priorities for the electricity sector include providing universal access to electricity and producing surplus energy for export. The electricity coverage in rural areas is among the lowest in Latin America and improving it represents a major challenge in the future. The government envisions a major expansion of electricity generation capacity to over 8,000 MW over the decade from 2015 to 2025, primarily to export surplus generating capacity.

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