By Danessa O. Rivera (The
Philippine Star) | Updated October 27, 2015 - 12:00am
MANILA, Philippines - German
companies are urging the Philippine government to improve processing for
renewable energy (RE) projects and aid in local risk mitigation to attract
power investments in off-grid areas.
The Philippines has good prospects
for RE developments because of the need for more supply and the availability of
solar and wind resources, IB vogt international business development director
Jens Kompauer said in a briefing held in Makati City yesterday.
“Conditions are very good. Energy
prices are high because you have to import coal but you have good solar, wind
resources. In the mid-term, it should be good prospects,” he said.
However, German firms have raised
concerns over risks and processing of RE investments at the local level.
Kompauer noted the smaller the
project is, the harder it gets to secure financing.
This calls for a local risk
mitigation for financing RE developments, Autarsys GmbH managing director
Matthias Ross said in the same briefing.
“What we need is local risk mitigation but we
know we have investors from Germany interested to invest in small power plants
from $200,000 to several million dollars, which normally is not a business case
for bigger banks who take care of $15 million upwards,” he said.
Among the main concerns seen in the
processing for RE projects is the land conversion.
Kompauer said land conversion
process is the biggest delay for projects for financing to be in place, which
can be “a show stopper” in the country’s RE development.
“It is not trivial that the general
process of development needs to be revised and, hopefully, facilitated. It is a
lengthy process especially looking at the land conversion aspects,” he said.
“We hope policymakers can address
this and we hope they can help RE can have more priority,” he added.
Despite concerns, German companies
are still keen on investing in the Philippines to participate in the country’s
90 percent electrification goal with RE.
“As long as we see a clear
supply-demand problem here, then we have to go to private sector,” Kompauer
said.
Officials of eight German companies
are in the country to look for partners to implement RE projects, particularly
in far-flung areas.
These companies include 8p2
Ingenieurspartnerschaft, an engineering firm specializing in technical
inspection and consulting; Autarsys GmbH, a provider of modular energy storage
systems; IB Vogt GmbH, a global solar EPC company; IBC Solar AG, an
international provider of comprehensive solar solutions; PV2 Energie GmbH, a
solar project developer; Qinous GmbH, a provider of plug and play energy
storage solutions; SaEnergy Systems GmbH, which provides independent and
stand-alone energy supply; Solea AG, a leading turnkey PV systems provider.
No comments:
Post a Comment