posted July 20, 2016 at
11:15 pm by Alena Mae S. Flores
The Luzon grid will
need an additional 5,000 megawatts by 2030 to support economic growth in the
next 15 years, an official of the Energy Department said Wednesday.
Energy Undersecretary
Mylene Capongol said the forecast was based on the 2015-2030 Distribution
Development Plans of 140 distribution utilities nationwide.
She said aside from the
Luzon grid, the Visayas grid would need 1,300 MW while Mindanao grid would require
around 900 MW of new generation capacity.
“The new administration
targets GDP growth of 6 percent to 7 percent in 2016, 6.5 percent to 7.5
percent in 2017 and 7 percent to 8 percent until 2022 with most of the spending
expected to support higher infrastructure needed to deliver basic services to
the people,” Capongol told participants of the 4th Annual Philippines Power and
Electricity Week Forum organized by IBC Asia
“Thus higher growth for
energy use specifically for electricity is expected, entailing significant
amount of investments mainly coming from the private sector,” Capongcol said.
Capongcol said in terms
of electricity production, a high dependency on coal was recorded at 44 percent
as of March 2016. Natural gas and renewable energy supplied 22 percent and 25
percent, respectively during the period.
“While we saw
significant growth in the use of variable renewable energy due to the different
incentives provided by the Renewable Energy Act, the supply of electricity from
hydro had been adversely affected by the El Niño phenomenon registering a
1-percent decline over the past five years,” she said.
Capongcol said Energy
Secretary Alfonso Cusi had asked the department to ensure the provision of
basic services especially electricity that was crucial in setting economic
development in the countryside.
She said that barely a
month in office, Cusi was able to solve the electricity connection problems
of 576 households in marginalized areas in Manila and Bulacan, allowing for
their more transparent power sourcing.
Capongcol said that in
terms of energy mix, oil accounted for around 31 percent in 2015, followed by
coal with 23 percent, geothermal with 19 percent, natural gas and hydro with 10
percent and other renewable energy such as biomass, solar and wind with 17
percent.
She said more than 53
percent of the country’s total energy requirement was supplied by indigenous
energy while 47 percent was from imported oil, mainly used for transport and
coal for generating electricity.
Capongcol said for the
upstream oil and gas development, the department would continue the conduct of
the Philippine Energy Contracting Round with a target of 18 service contracts
for award until 2030.
The service contracts
will form part of the petroleum reserves estimated at 94.74 million barrels of
oil, 3.96 trillion cubic feet of gas and 41.34 million barrels of condensate.
“In terms of indigenous
coal, we are monitoring 48 exploration service contracts for declaration of
additional coal reserves in commercial quantity [mineable] to enable the
conversion of these service contracts to development/production contracts. With
this, we estimated the in-situ coal reserves to reach 4,297.7 MMMT by 2030,”
Capongcol said.
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