Through the public utility company Instituto Costarricense de Electricidad (ICE), this flagship project will finance the construction and upgrade of transmission and distribution grids while supporting initiatives to promote renewable energy generation in Costa Rica. Costa Rica is well known for its large share of power generation sourced from renewable sources – over 99% – based on hydro, wind, and geothermal projects. This stands out internationally and in the region. In 2019 the government passed a national plan to make Costa Rica one of the world's first. Costa Rican law provides two main forms of representation: a representative and a distributor. The representative can also be considered an agent. A representative/agent/distributor is any. 6W monitors the market across 60+ countries Globally, publishing an annual market outlook report that analyses trends, key drivers, Size, Volume, Revenue, opportunities, and market segments. This report offers comprehensive insights, helping businesses understand market dynamics and make informed. For supply to remote areas, Costa Rica now has four large electricity cooperatives, with a total of 180,393 members and service areas that cover more than a fifth of the national territory. Together, these co-operatives supply electricity to over 392,000 users, mostly living in rural settlements. This is a sub-operation of the EU's Global Gateway in Costa Rica (CR) under the ELECTRICITY INTEGRATION OF CENTRAL AMERICA Lending Envelope, which contributes to implement the Global Gateway Investment Agenda (GGIA) flagship initiative in Central America. The 2021 Distributed Energy Law (Law 10086) provides a strong legal framework for self-generation.