By Danessa Rivera (The
Philippine Star) | Updated June 28, 2016 - 12:00am
MANILA, Philippines - The Indonesian
government’s decision to ban all ships from sailing to the Philippines is not a
cause for alarm in the local power industry as operators of local coal plants
still have around a month-long inventory and are currently looking for
alternative sources of coal, the Department of Energy (DOE) said yesterday.
In a briefing, DOE Secretary Zenaida
Monsada said power outages are not seen in the immediate future as coal plant
operators are required to have around 20 to 30 days of coal inventory.
“We have imposed a requirement on
them. Based on our circular, they should have 20 to 30 days of inventory,
including those in transit,” she said.
Monsada said the agency is now
collating information on those coal reserves that are in transit. “We need to
see the delivery schedules to see if there are deferred coal shipments,” she
said.
Meanwhile, coal operators are also
looking for other sources of coal and alternatives include Australia, Russia
and Vietnam, the energy secretary said.
“In case the Indonesian source is
not available, we have other sources like Australia, Russia and Vietnam but
these will have a different quality. (Operators) of power plants would (also)
need to negotiate for their respective new contracts,” she said.
Last week, the Indonesian government
banned any Indonesian-flagged vessel to sail to the Philippines following
abductions in the Sulu Sea by armed groups. The ban also covers vessels
containing coal shipments.
Monsada clarified all coal shipments
are not made using Indonesian flag-bearing vessels.
While the ruling is not yet seen to
have an immediate impact, the DOE elevated its concern to Malacañang, the
Department of National Defense (DND) and the Department of Foreign Affairs
(DFA) since Indonesia is the country’s major source for coal, Monsada said.
“So far, the DFA has had talks with
Malaysia and Indonesia for security but we don’t know at what level they are in
their agreement,” she said.
Based on DOE’s 2015 data, Indonesia
accounts for 95 percent of the country’s total coal imports, amounting to 16.56
million metric tons.
In terms of coal usage, 79.77
percent is used in power generation, 15.22 percent in the cement industry and
5.02 percent in industrial and direct processing industries.
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