Published May 10, 2017, 10:00 PM By Thin Lei Win
(Thomson Reuters Foundation)
Bangkok – The Philippines can save
$200 million a year and build a more reliable energy supply for millions of
residents on its small islands by replacing diesel generators with renewable
sources such as wind and solar, said a report released on Monday.
The switch would require at least $1
billion in private investment in the short term, but the sum would be offset by
savings of $200 million each year – an expense currently borne by users, the
report said.
Many of the archipelago nation’s
small islands cannot access larger electricity grids.
Mini-grids powered by generators
that use imported diesel and oil serve approximately 800,000 households, but
there are frequent blackouts, said the report by the US-based Institute for
Energy Economics and Financial Analysis (IEEFA) and Manila-based Institute for
Climate and Sustainable Cities (ICSC).
Less than 10 percent of 233 small
islands have 24-hour electricity, while more than 70 percent have less than
eight hours of electricity per day, according to the ICSC.
Modernizing small island power
systems with renewables will supply cheaper, efficient, secure, cleaner power,
the report said.
“Renewable energy systems are not
only sustainable but affordable and secure because there is no fuel requirements,”
Sarah Ahmed, IEEFA’s energy finance analyst and the report’s main author, told
the Thomson Reuters Foundation.
Since 2009, solar power costs have
fallen by 90 percent and that of wind power has fallen 50 percent, the report
said. Yet many small islands in the Philippines have not turned to renewables
due to a host of factors including outdated regulations, it said.
This includes a lack of incentives
for island electric cooperatives – small, customer-owned utilities controlled
by locally elected boards – to procure cheaper sources, and slow implementation
of a 2008 law meant to promote the development of renewable energy, it added.
“Islands such as Sumba in Indonesia
have already cut energy costs by 35 percent by following the global trend towards
renewables,” Jose Logarta, ICSC senior energy advisor and co-author of the
report, said in a statement.
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