posted June 22, 2016 at 11:05 pm by Alena Mae S. Flores
The Philippines needs an additional
10,000 megawatts of power capacity in the next 15 years, which will require
investments of up to $30 billion to support the growing economy, a top
executive said Wednesday.
Manila Electric Co. chairman Manuel
Pangilinan told reporters the current available capacity might not meet the
growth in demand.
Pangilinan said total demand was
currently at 12,000 megawatts, while installed capacity was estimated at 16,000
MW. “On paper, it looks like we do have sufficient reserves,” he said.
Pangilinan, however, said the actual
capacity from the existing power plants was lower as evidenced by the second
day of ‘yellow alert’ for the Luzon grid, which reflected the thin reserves.
System operator National Grid
Corporation of the Philippines on Wednesday declared Luzon under ‘yellow alert’
from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. due to low level of contingency reserves brought about by
insufficient supply.
Available capacity for Luzon was
placed at 10,208 MW as of 8 a.m. Wednesday while peak demand was at 9,370 MW.
Meralco said Calaca 1 and Malaya 2
power plants were on limited output while Pagbilao 2 and Kalayaan 3 were on
scheduled maintenance.
Other plants such as GN Power 1,
South Luzon Power Generation Corp. 1, Angat Main 2 and Malaya 1 were still
offline.
“The actual nameplate capacity in
relation to the actual capacity to produce power versus the capacity is much
lower especially if some plants are on planned or unplanned shutdowns,”
Pangilinan said.
He said there was a consensus that
demand could rise to as much as 24,000 MW by 2030.
“Clearly the country needs more
capacities to be built in the next 15 years or so. The question to this country
is, you know you have to build power plants, because the economy will grow at
6, 7 to 8 percent. Whatever it is, and some of these plants especially some of
the oil fired plants are too old, too expensive to operate,” he said.
“We do know we have to build at
least 10,000 MW more plants, [for] at least $2 million per MW. You’re talking
$20 billion to 30 billion of investments needed in the next 15 years or so,”
Pangilinan said.
He said government should come up
with a clear fuel mix, whether coal, gas or renewables, which the private
sector could follow.
“We need a policy direction, what is
the appropriate fuel mix for our people. And once that’s decided, businesses
will build the plants, whether it’s a gas plant, coal plant or renewable plant.
So we just need a direction,” he said.
Pangilinan said while there was a
push towards clean energy, the government needed to quantify the cost of building
renewable energy, which he said was more expensive.
“The seduction for renewables is
there. But can you build RE to build enough renewables to fill up this 10,000
to 12,000 MW of additional capacity and more importantly, how much would it
cost. You have to address that. It’s not cheap. It’s not going to be cheaper
than coal or gas,” Pangilinan said.
“Remember, there’s always a price
you need to protect environment,” he said.
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