By BusinessMirror - March 13, 2018
https://businessmirror.com.ph/phl-energy-sector-takes-center-stage-in-worlds-biggest-industry-event/
THE country’s booming energy
industry is expected to get more foreign investors as the Philippine government
ramps up its nontraditional trade and investments promotion drive in the
upcoming Hannover Messe in Hannover, Germany, from April 23 to 27.
The Department of Trade and Industry‐Center for International Trade Expositions and Missions (DTI‐Citem) is keen on attracting more investments for the
country’s energy sector through export-promotion activities in line with the
government’s Philippine Energy Plan (PEP) 2012‐2030.
“We are elevating trade and
investment promotion to a whole new level as we tap our partners from the
energy sector for inclusive growth in a collective participation in this
world’s most important industrial trade show and the largest capital goods
exhibition in Germany,” said Nora K. Terrado, DTI undersecretary for
Trade and Investments Promotion Group.
Hannover Messe covers the complete
picture of the world’s five industrial value‐adding
chain under one roof, namely energy; integrated automation, motion and drivers,
or IAMD; industrial supply; research and technology; and digital factory.
In 2017 the Germany‐based event gathered 6,500 companies from over 70 nations
and was attended by 225,000 visitors and trade buyers across the world,
generating around 5.6 million partnerships, business models and other contacts.
“As a melting pot of the global
industrial-value chain, Hannover Messe is the prime platform to drumbeat and
build up investor confidence on the Philippines as a global powerhouse of
renewable energy and other relevant technologies,” Terrado said.
Aside from renewable energy, the DTI‐Citem also seeks to secure investments for local
stakeholders in energy efficiency, conservation and transmission in the
Philippines.
With the theme “Solutions for the
New Era of Energy,” the energy sector of Hannover Messe 2018 will focus on
innovative technologies for electric power systems to become more flexible, to
intelligently connect sectors and to engage new market participants amid an
increasingly decentralized global energy chain.
In preparation for Hannover Messe,
Terrado said they are gathering a pool of 15 Philippine companies that
represent the nation’s best foot forward in terms of energy systems,
technology, services and other industrial goods.
“Through this synergy among
stakeholders, we will be able to seal partnerships with foreign investors and
mobilize much‐needed funding and infrastructure to our energy players,”
Terrado said. “It will also give motivation to our local energy stakeholders to
fast‐track efforts toward the mainstream use of renewable-energy
sources in the Philippines as more and more countries have started their
industrial shift toward more sustainable power sources.”
Part of the DTI‐Citem’s energy- investment drive is to arrange business‐matching meetings between Philippine renewable-energy
companies to potential investors, technology adapters, developers, suppliers
and other local energy stakeholders in the international tradeshow.
Renewable energy is defined as
energy generated from natural processes that are continuously replenished,
which includes biomass, geothermal, hydro, wind, solar and ocean energy under
the PEP 2012‐2030.
It has been identified in the
Investment Priority Plan 2017‐2019 as an emerging sector that
needs government intervention particularly in export promotion.
Based on the Department of Energy
Philippine Power Situation Report, the country’s total power capacity in 2016
is at 53.16 million tons of oil equivalent (MTOE) with renewable energy
occupying the second-largest share at 32.5 percent, only next to coal at 34.6
percent. The top renewable-energy sources in the Philippines are hydropower
(16.9 percent) and geothermal (8.9 percent), followed by biomass, wind and
solar (6.6 percent).
In a separate statement, the energy
department also said the Philippines has an operational wind energy of 426
megawatts, one of the highest in Southeast Asia. The country enjoys this
distinction because of its strategic location where international financial
institutions like the World Bank and Asian Development Bank have
regional offices. These international FIs provide loans to countries of the
world for capital programs relating to social and economic development.
The International Geothermal
Association said the Philippines also ranks second to the United States
in producing geothermal energy worldwide.
Based on Bloomberg’s New Energy Finance
“New Energy Outlook” report, solar and wind power generation will dominate the
future of electricity where 72 percent of the $10.2 trillion spent on new power
generation and installation worldwide between 2017 to 2040 will be invested in
new solar photovoltaic plants and wind parks.
This Bloomberg report also said the
increase of wind capacity will contribute to a higher share of renewable energy
in the overall energy mix, thus increasing energy security and reducing
carbon-dioxide emission. Unlike other types of power plants, wind energy emits
no air pollutants or greenhouse gases.
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