Luzon power crisis looms—Angara
Luzon power crisis looms—Angara
Senator Edgardo Angara
The energy shortage that Mindanao is experiencing will hit Luzon in
two years unless the Aquino administration taps more renewable energy
sources, Senator Edgardo Angara warned Sunday.
Angara assailed what he called the “feet-dragging” of the
administration—and also of the administration of former President Gloria
Macapagal-Arroyo—in fully implementing the 2008 Philippine Renewable
Energy Act.
“Luzon will [experience] its own crisis in two years’ time unless we
open up our renewable energy sources,” Angara said in an interview over
dzBB radio.
Also on Sunday, the environmental group Greenpeace reminded President
Benigno Aquino III of his campaign promise to promote renewable energy
and increase the share of cleaner technologies in the country’s energy
mix.
Greenpeace has bucked proposals to give the President emergency
powers to solve the power crisis in Mindanao. The group instead urged
Mr. Aquino to press the implementation of the renewable energy law to
deal with Mindanao’s problem.
The only power
“The only power President Aquino needs right now is the power to make
good on his commitments when he was elected,” said Von Hernandez,
Greenpeace Southeast Asia executive director.
“During his campaign for the presidency, Mr. Aquino declared he [was]
for the phaseout of coal power plants in the country. Unfortunately,
he seems to have forgotten his promise, allowing the implementation of
the [renewable energy] law to drag on and letting coal plant proposals
get through left and right.”
Campaigning in 2010, Mr. Aquino said “the country must seriously move
toward a clear shift to clean energy and technologies.” Greenpeace said
the President made the statement in response to the “Green Electoral
Initiative” survey of Greenpeace and the EcoWaste Coalition. He also
committed to increase the share of renewable energy in the country’s
energy mix to at least 50 percent within the next 10 years, with the
full implementation of the Renewable Energy Act.
Presidential deputy spokesperson Abigail Valte said she would talk to
Energy Secretary Jose Rene Almendras about implementing of the
renewable energy law and bringing Angara’s warning to his attention. But
she noted that Luzon still had a power surplus.
Angara said proponents of renewable energy anticipated the “incoming
storm”—that the country might not be able to support industrialization
purely on imported crude—at least four years ago.
Back then, he said, some $5 billion in fresh investments in renewable
energy were lined up. But the investors moved to neighboring countries
like Indonesia, Thailand and Cambodia because the Philippine government
failed to determine how much a renewable energy generator would earn,
Angara said.
Now, he said, $1 billion in renewable energy investments, including investment from European companies, are “ready to come in.”
But the government has not fully enforced the renewable energy law to
encourage full development. “We’re always late, we always move at the
last minute,” Angara said.
Ambiguous, confused
The administration’s renewable-energy policy, Angara said, is “very ambiguous.”
“The policy laid down by the law is clear, but it seems that the implementers themselves are confused,” Angara said in Filipino.
The power shortage in Mindanao, he said, could be traced to the
government’s failure to sufficiently invest in renewable energy. “That’s
the cause of this crisis, we jogged around in terms of renewable
energy,” he said. “This is our long-term solution, because [our
renewable energy reserves are] sufficient to cover all our energy
needs.”
According to the Department of Energy, about 35 percent of the
country’s energy comes from renewable sources such as water, geothermal
gas and biomass. The Renewable Energy Act aims to attract investors to
put up other clean technologies, such as wind and solar farms.
But the implementation of the government’s renewable energy policy is
slow, according to Greenpeace and other environmental groups like
Worldwide Fund for Nature-Philippines.
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