Solar Energy in Jamaica

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The Hyatt's Hotel's solar water heater .
The Hyatt's Hotel's solar water heater .
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The Mallards Beach-Hyatt Hotel, where Eaton Haughton installed a solar water heater with the aim of establishing solar energy in Jamaica.
The Mallards Beach-Hyatt Hotel, where Eaton Haughton installed a solar water heater with the aim of establishing solar energy in Jamaica.
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The hotel's staff cottages. The experimental heater is on the third roof from the left.
The hotel's staff cottages. The experimental heater is on the third roof from the left.
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Eaton Haughton (in the foreground) explaining his system to visitors.
Eaton Haughton (in the foreground) explaining his system to visitors.

In September of 1979 the Mallards Beach-Hyatt Hotel in Ocho Rios, Jamaica went “on line” with a commercial solar water-heating system, establishing solar energy in Jamaica for the first time.

The very fact that the prestigious hotel decided to enter the “solar age” is interesting of course, but perhaps even more impressive is the story of just how the Hyatt’s heating system came to be.

Mr. Eaton Haughton, who holds the position of Special Projects Engineer for Jamaica’s National Hotels and Properties group, initiated the project. Haughton admits that he had no real training in solar theory at the time that he approached the hotel management with his idea. He did, however, feel a deep dissatisfaction with the slow rate at which his nation’s public and private sectors were moving toward energy conservation … and he also had a shade-tree mechanic’s knack for gathering information (from magazine articles, photographs, and conversations with solar experts) and then translating the scattered bits of data into real, working equipment.

After making an analysis of the hotel’s hot water consumption, Eaton suggested a plan for meeting that demand — a step at a time — with inexpensive, renewable solar energy. The “powers that be” were cautious, he reports, but — after the engineer had proved his point by installing an experimental heater on the roof of one of the hotel’s staff cottages — he was given permission to go ahead with the project!

The completed “first step” solar conversion — which supplies hot water to the huge resort’s laundry department — cost a total of $20,000. (The financial figures given here are in terms of Jamaican dollars, each — at the time of this writing — worth about 56¢ U.S.)

  • Published on Nov 1, 1980
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