Danessa Rivera (The Philippine Star)
- June 10, 2018 - 12:00am
MANILA, Philippines — The
interconnection of the Visayas and Mindanao power grids by 2020 will
boost the reliability of the power grid and allow the country to
participate in regional trading amid ASEAN integration, the National Grid Corp.
of the Philippines (NGCP) said.
NGCP recently launched the
P52-billion Mindanao-Visayas Interconnection Project (MVIP) which will unify
the country’s transmission network, allowing the grid to become resilient in
the face of calamities and to provide power to where it is needed the most.
The massive project will directly
affect 35 local government units (LGUs) across four provinces in Visayas and
Mindanao, NGCP said.
Once the MVIP is completed in 2020,
the Philippines is closer to having a reliable transmission network that can
sustain the energy demand across the country, the grid operator said.
“This landmark project will boost
investments, infrastructure and commerce, among others, as it stands to bring
about a more stable, sufficient and resilient power supply needed to sustain
the region, and in effect, the entire country’s socioeconomic progress. Any
energy-related obstacles will be resolved with the sharing and efficient use of
all grid-connected power sources, from as far as Ilocos in the north, to Davao
in the south,” NGCP president and CEO Anthony Almeda said.
Visayas is currently suffering from
an energy shortage due to a variety of factors, while Mindanao is experiencing
a surplus of power brought about by the influx of new generating capacity in
the island.
NGCP said putting the MVIP in place
reinforces the Mindanao transmission backbone that will be completed by the
first quarter of 2019.
“This backbone will allow NGCP to
manage a transmission network in Mindanao enough to maximize the MVIP’s full
capacity,” the grid operator said.
Apart from solving internal
transmission issues, NGCP said unifying the Philippines’ transmission grid also
fulfils one of the country’s commitments to the Association of Southeast Asian
Nations (ASEAN), which envisions to be an economic community in the next few
years.
“The interconnection of the
Philippine transmission grid will allow us to participate in the multilateral
energy trading activity within Southeast Asia as the ASEAN gears up for
economic integration later on,” Almeda said.
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