By Lenie Lectura - July 25, 2017
THE National Renewable Energy Board
(NREB) on Tuesday underscored the importance of the Renewable Energy (RE) Trust
Fund that has yet to be implemented nine years after the RE law was enacted
into law.
“If you collate all the funds, that
should serve as fund for the DOE [Department of Energy] to utilize for RE
systems, RE programs. That…is provided by law that should be collected from
agencies. Until now, we haven’t collected,” NREB Chairman Jose Layug said.
The RE Trust Fund is among the
priorities that the board is pursuing to fully realize the benefits of Republic
Act (RA) 9513, or the Renewable Energy Act of 2008.
Under the law, the said fund shall
be sourced from proceeds from the emission fees collected from all generating
facilities consistent with RA 8749, or the Philippine Clean Air Act.
Other sources include 1.5 percent of
the net annual income of the Philippine Charity Sweepstakes Office; 1.5 percent
of the net annual income of the Philippine Amusement and Gaming Corp.; 1.5
percent of the net annual dividends remitted to the National Treasury of the
Philippine National Oil Co. and its subsidiaries; 1.5 percent of the proceeds
of the government share collected from the development and use of indigenous
non-RE resources; among others.
The creation of the RE Trust Fund is
meant to enhance the development and greater utilization of RE. It shall be
administered by the DOE as a special account in any of the government financial
institutions that shall be exclusively used to finance the research, development,
demonstration and promotion of the widespread and productive use of RE systems
for power and non-power applications.
The fund shall also support the
development and operation of new RE resources to improve their competitiveness
in the market.
“Under the law, it’s
retroactive…[and] 2009 was the year of effectivity. For every year of that,
there is a percentage allocated for RE,” Layug said, adding that the amount
could be utilized “basically for research, one project here and there.
But it will not amount to billions.”
Layug said the DOE needs to approve
the RE Trust Fund rules through a department circular. Once signed, NREB will
hold a dialogue with these agencies for them to allocate the money. “We haven’t
talked to them because the DOE needs to sign the RE Trust Fund rules first,” he
said.
Last month NREB approved the rules
on RE Trust Fund and Green Energy Option. Layug said NREB now awaits the DOE’s
approval.
The Green Energy Option is a
mechanism to provide end-users the option to choose RE as their source of
energy. The DOE, in consultation with the NREB, will establish the program and
formulate the implementing rules and regulations.
Layug said an endorsement from the
DOE for these two programs could be processed within three to five months. “The
DOE will issue a circular on the rules. Usually, it’s just a yes or no after we
have approved it,” he said.
The two programs, Layug said, could
be implemented this year. “It is the target that these are up for
implementation within the year.”
While the DOE, according to Director
Mario Marasigan, cannot commit on the approval of the Green Energy Option and
RE Trust Fund, “these are priority policies of DOE.”
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