posted January 17, 2016 at 11:35 pm by Alena Mae S. Flores
The Energy Department renewed its
call on Congress to declare critical energy projects of national significance
in the wake of right-of-way issues hounding transmission lines in Mindanao.
Energy director Jesus Tamang told
reporters the passage of such a law would be a boost to the country’s energy
supply security efforts.
Tamang said the proposed law would
benefit transmission and other energy projects and avoid land reclassification
and zoning cases similar to what happened in the Pandacan depot.
Oil companies were forced to leave
Pandacan last year after the Supreme Court upheld the City of Manila’s decision
ordering the removal of the Pandacan depot on safety concerns.
“Under this proposed law, if an
energy facility is cited as projects of national significance, it can no longer
be removed,” the energy official said.
He said the issuance of an executive
order to implement the policy was not enough.
“If it’s an EO, they will just issue
a project certification. We have to show other government units [that]
the law is above them,” Tamang said.
AC Energy Holdings chief executive
officer John Eric Francia welcomed the passage of legislations that would
ensure the construction of energy project and help resolve right-of-way issues.
“RoW is always an issue, not only
transmission but also new and existing plants. We’ve got to revisit the policy
to address these. Government [must] update the laws to make sure that
right-of-way acquisition is more expedient,” Francia said.
National Grid Corp. of the Philippines,
meanwhile, said it completed the repair of tower 63 but but has not gained
access to tower 25 bombed in December 25 last year.
National Grid completed the repair
of bombed tower 63 along the Kabacan-Sultan Kudarat 138 kV line on Saturday.
Lawless elements bombed the tower on January 14.
“Repair fortunately proceeded
unhindered as NGCP encountered no resistance from landowners. Tower 25 in
Ramain, Lanao del Norte, which was bombed last December 25. 2015, still remains
unrepaired as NGCP awaits resolution of the RoW issues between landowner
Sambitori and government-owned National Transmission Corp.,” it said.
The landowner denied access,
demanding demanded payment from TransCo for their decades-old claim.
National Grid is spending P8 billion
in 2016 to improve, expand, rehabilitate and repair the nationwide transmission
system and the power grid.
National Grid said the budget was
needed to avoid disruption of operation and complay with its mandate under the
Electric Power Industry Reform Act of 2001 as the country’s transmission
operator.
NGCP plans to spend the amount to
finance the upgrade of the Tiwi and Naga substations, Clark-Mabiga 69 kV
transmission line, Bataan 230 KV grid reinforcement, Hermosa-San Jose 500 KV
transmission line, maintenance of equipment, revenue metering expansion and
maintenance, telecommunications and SCADA maintenance and expansion, corporate
and security infrastructure and assets for acquisition.
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