Published January 23, 2018, 10:00 PM
By Myrna M.
Velasco
The enforcement of Executive Order
(EO) No. 30 in streamlining power project approvals is not seen to be “too
immediate” by the Department of Energy, as it noted that this is a policy aligned
to aid next batch of power investments taking off from blueprints around
2020-2021 period.
“It is a policy instrument that we
are using to make sure that there are no project delays… we are looking at
power projects in the next investment cycle, which is year 2020-2021,” Energy
Secretary Alfonso G. Cusi.
The only immediate project being
contemplated to be placed within the ambit of EO 30 is the proposed
rehabilitation of the Agus-Pulangui hydropower complexes in Mindanao.
State-run National Power Corporation
(NPC) already crunched numbers that the required investment for the hydropower
complex’s rehabilitation would be R54 billion.
Both the Departments of Energy and
Finance had been on agreement that it would be a better option to rehabilitate
the hydropower complex prior to its planned privatization so the government
could fetch optimized proceeds from it.
Cusi, nevertheless, admitted that
there are limitations to what the department can enforce under EO 30 – such as
project concerns on some facets of community approvals, chiefly the issues
under the tutelage of the National Commission for Indigenous Peoples.
Additionally, the tricky sphere of
approvals of power supply agreements (PSAs) on the sale of generated capacity
of power plants is also beyond DOE’s control – as that is a mandate vested by
law to the Energy Regulatory Commission.
Cusi cites the ‘oversupply’
situation in the country’s power industry today, but to his assessment, it will
not take long before supply-demand axis will intersect again.
When that happens, he noted that
such shall be taken as a signal for the entry of next wave of investments in
the power sector – and the department anticipates that timeframe to be between
years 2020 to 2021.
The EO, he said, is a preparatory
policy to that phase. Hence, at this juncture, the energy chief noted that they
are taking their “sweet time” into the crafting of the Palace directive’s
implementing rules and regulations.
The department already had its
consultations and collaboration initiatives with other relevant agencies
involved in power project approvals, but Cusi emphasized “it is taking time for
the IRR to be completed because we also want to make that the policy is not
going to be abused by any player in the industry.”
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