By:
Ronnel W. Domingo - 12:12 AM March 18, 2017
CONCEPCION,
Tarlac—Solar Philippines yesterday broke ground for its 150-megawatt project in
this town, which would cost at least $195 million (P9.75 billion) and was
expected to be able to produce enough energy for the entire province’s needs.
Concepcion Solar Farm,
expected to be completed by the third quarter this year, is primed to be the
country’s biggest solar power producer with 450,000 panels over 150 hectares of
what used to be sugarcane farms.
Leandro Leviste, Solar
president and chief executive, said during the ceremonial kickoff that
Concepcion Solar Farm would be the first such project to feature locally made
panels and batteries for 24-hour power.
“This is [also] the first in the Philippines
to [be built] at lower cost than coal and first to demonstrate that renewable
energy as baseload (power-generating resource) is already here and not
something that will take 10 or 20 more years,” Leviste said.
He said the solar farm
would offer electricity at about P1 per kilowatt-hour or 10 percent lower than
the cost of power generated based on coal.
The Concepcion facility
will use panels made in the company’s factory in Batangas, which started
production this month and where 1,000 jobs are expected to be created.
Leviste said that he
expected solar power facilities with batteries “will surprise the industry and
will emerge as the least costly power source in the country.”
His optimism is based
mainly on Solar Philippines achieving a level of integration that enables the
company to be the developer, investor, contractor as well as supplier for its
own projects.
The Concepcion project
will initially operate as a merchant supplier, and Solar is engaged in ongoing
discussions with distribution utilities and local electric cooperatives for
supply off-take contracts.
Also this year, Solar
plans to start construction of a number of other projects, including 50 MW of
new capacity in Batangas and Cavite.
Leviste said the smaller facility would supply electricity to Manila Electric Co. through a recently forged agreement.
Leviste said the smaller facility would supply electricity to Manila Electric Co. through a recently forged agreement.
The company also
intends to venture into foreign markets as the domestic market approaches a
situation where generation capacity—not only for solar but also for fossil
fuel-based resources —exceeds demand.
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