by Myrna Velasco October 18, 2016
Department of Energy (DOE) is
pushing the envelope when it comes to integrating nuclear into the country’s
technology options in the shifting energy mix, but power industry players are
giving it the cold shoulder.
Even as debates on the proposed
energy mix is intensifying, nuclear appeared to still be the elephant in the
room for many of the deep-pocketed power investors in the country, unless
policy and regulatory frameworks on this technology option are first rewired,
rewritten and cast on clear directions.
Aboitiz Power Corporation President
Antonio R. Moraza simply noted that the DOE has “more important matters to
focus on” especially when it comes to needed policy improvements in the sector.
The company is not setting its sight
on nuclear power given the other more pressing issues of the sector, primarily
the need to widen the base of energy demand in the country by improving on
investment policies and ease the deemed uncertainties triggered by some
government pronouncements.
First Gen Corporation President
Francis Giles B. Puno also set on record that they are “not looking at nuclear”
in their forward investment plans.
For DOE to propel its nuclear
ambition into the country’s energy mix, its first task is to convince not just
the public and politicians, but primarily the investors to place their bet on
it.
For PHINMA Energy Corporation
President Francisco L. Viray, he opined that the DOE must first assess how
nuclear would fare in a market-driven environment as it may not be a viable and
competitive option for project sponsors and eventually for the Filipino
consumers.
He said nuclear could have been
ideal in a vertically integrated power utility set-up such as with the Bataan
Nuclear Power Plant (BNPP) under the tutelage then of state-run National Power
Corporation (NPC). But with the structural changes in the power industry,
the investment and market dynamics also changed dramatically and that needs to
be re-studied.
On public acceptance of the
technology owing to the recent nuclear scare out of the Fukushima disaster in
Japan, the DOE has yet to set the tone and parameters as well as boundaries of
discussion when it comes to assuring safety and security features of the
technology.
Senate Committee on Energy Chairman
Sherwin Gatchalian has already indicated that he will file a measure that will
support DOE’s bid to study the nuclear option – one that is anchored more on
positioning it as a long-term technology bid for the country rather than the
plan to repower the mothballed BNPP.
Energy Undersecretary Felix William
Fuentebella argued that the DOE’s push on the technology is predicated upon
goals to eventually reverse the heightened carbon footprints of the country due
to the massive scale of coal plant developments in recent years until the
present.
Energy Secretary Alfonso G. Cusi
similarly noted that “the DOE is evaluating the use of nuclear energy and its
possible contribution to the energy mix.”
Nevertheless, he acknowledged that
“initial steps have to be made first, such as the establishment of a Nuclear
Energy Program Implementation Organization (NEPIO), creation of a National
Policy and Program on Nuclear Energy and even extensive public consultations to
identify the public’s concerns or reservation on nuclear energy utilization.”
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