by Myrna Velasco September 25, 2016
Mindanao is desperately exploring
project development pathways that could reverse its carbon footprint-laden coal
plant installations, hence, it is now looking at the planned Agus and Pulangui
expansion projects for colossal addition to its renewable energy (RE)capacity.
Romeo Montenegro, Director for
Investment Promotions and Public Affairs of the Mindanao Development Authority
(MinDA), has apprised media on the sidelines of Powertrends 2016 that the
long-blueprinted Agus 3 expansion could yield capacity addition of 250 to 260
megawatts.
The proposed Pulangui V hydro power
plant expansion, on the other, will be for a bigger capacity of 300 megawatts.
Montenegro disclosed that the Agus-3
project has already secured its service contract from the Department of Energy
(DOE); while for the planned Pulangui V hydropower facility, it is already the
financing arrangement that the project proponents have been working on.
The big-ticket hydropower projects,
in addition to the smaller RE ventures, have been the capacity developments eyed
by the Mindanao development agency when it comes to re-balancing eventually its
grid’s energy mix.
“For big capacities from RE, we’re
looking at Agus 3, this is already in financial discussion stage with the
proponent that had been awarded by a service contract by the DOE,” Montenegro
said.
He added the original proponent from
the Pagarungan family already cemented partnerships with various investors to
enable them to advance the venture into implementation phase.
“They (project proponents) are at
the process of completing their application for PSA (power supply agreement).
They already have service contract and once PSA is there, they probably
conclude financial closing and then start off the construction,” Montenegro has
emphasized.
For Pulangui V project, he noted
that this is “subject to the final way forward decision of the DOE – whether to
have it bidded out or award the contract to the original proponent, which is
Greenergy Development Corporation.”
“Pulangui V is going to have a dam,
it is expected to have 300MW capacity. That does not include the possible
increment or increase in its capacity once rehabilitation and uprating are
completed. Plus possible investments that can be done, for instance, in terms
of the Pulangui uprating like dredging so it can increase its capacity,”
Montenegro explained.
With these two major expansion
projects, Mindanao grid is hoping that it can substantially pare its carbon
footprints come year 2020 and onwards – as its power project developments
leaned heavily this time on coal plants.
“If you add to the ones that we are
currently tracking, the small RE players, we would be able to achieve our
figure of at least injecting to the grid substantial capacity from renewable
energy,” the MinDA official said.
He emphasized that there are 284
projects with a potential capacity of 3,700MW — thus, “even if we just target
around 1,000MW of these RE projects, these are already big in terms of RE
capacity addition in our energy mix.”
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