(The Philippine Star) | Updated January 22, 2018 - 12:00am
MANILA, Philippines —
The Department of Energy (DOE) will soon declare a geothermal project with at
least 100 megawatts (MW) in capacity as the first ‘Project of National
Significance’ under executive order (EO) 30, its top official said.
One project is now
tabled for signing to be listed under EO 30, which is a geothermal power
project with a capacity of more than 100 MW, Energy Secretary Alfonso Cusi
said.
The project is under a
local company, he said, declining to give more details.
“I’m ready to declare
one company as project of national significance,” he said. “The only thing is,
I want to make sure all other agencies are aligned. And I want to just make
sure all questions are answered.”
The energy chief said
the geothermal facility answers the country’s need of developing indigenous
power sources, as well as the need to have cleaner energy.
“One, we know that
indigenous power development has its challenges. Plus, we also want clean
source. We want one that will qualify as baseload…It qualifies to all those
requirements, not just value of the investment,” Cusi said.
Signed by President
Duterte in June last year, EO 30 provides that government agencies concerned
with energy projects should presume other agencies were able to act upon and
issue their respective permits within a 30-day period.
The order also creates
the Energy Investment Coordinating Council – led by DOE, which will spearhead
and coordinate national government efforts to harmonize, integrate and
streamline regulatory processes, requirements and forms relevant to the
development of energy investments in the country.
Other members of the
council include representatives from various national government agencies and
relevant energy institutions (e.g., Department of Environment and Natural
Resources, Department of Finance, Department of Justice, Department of
Transportation, National Electrification Administration, National Grid Corp. of
the Philippines, National Power Corp., National Transmission Corp., Housing and
Land Use Regulatory Board, Palawan Council for Sustainable Development and
other relevant government agencies).
Previously, Cusi said
the agency is preparing a list of power projects that will be under EO 30 as
long as these developments have a high social impact.
He said the list
includes the planned $2-billion liquefied natural gas (LNG) terminal, which is
targeted to start construction within 2018.
The DOE has tasked its
corporate arm Philippine National Oil Co. to spearhead the development of the
country’s integrated LNG hub, consisting of five million metric tons per annum
of storage, liquefaction, regassification and distribution facility, as well as
a reserve initial power plant capacity of 200 MW.
PNOC is currently
evaluating unsolicited proposals from seven firms, namely Korea Electric Power
Corp., Lloyds Energy Group, China National Offshore Oil Co., First Gen Corp.,
Energy World Corp., PT. Jaya Samudra Karunia and PT PGN LNG Indonesia/PT Bosowa
Corporindo with their local partner MOF Corp.
Two of the submitted
proposals were already rejected, Cusi said earlier.
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