Updated
July 12, 2018, 10:24 AM By
Myrna M. Velasco
Discussions have been
gaining traction toward the use of power lines of the electric cooperatives
(ECs) to close the digital divide in the country, primarily the much-wished
Internet connection of the rural areas.
The National
Electrification Administration (NEA) said talks have already begun with the
Department of Information and Communications Technology (DICT) on the use of
the power lines for last-mile broadband connection.
Exploring that
possibility has so far been advanced in the initial meeting that NEA
Administrator Edgardo Masongsong and DICT acting secretary recently had.
The DICT, it was noted,
has presented its National Broadband Plan to the electrification agency – with
the ECs perceptibly having that stretch of connection to the marginal consumers
even in far-flung areas of the country.
Fundamentally, the
country’s broadband program builds to a great extent on the use of the dark
fiber optic cables in the transmission lines being operated by the National
Grid Corporation of the Philippines.
A tripartite agreement
on the plan was inked last month – and the DICT had already set forth plans on
P20 billion worth of capital spending to reinforce the country’s Internet
connectivity.
As far as DICT is
concerned, it has been sounding off the role that electric cooperatives will be
playing in the targeted intensified last mile connection for prospective
Internet users in rural domains.
For the NEA chief, he
noted that this development will be very important, anchoring it chiefly on
DICT’s pronouncement that the ECs “can be Internet service providers (ISP) in
their respective coverage areas.”
The electrification
agency’s commitment then is its cooperation into advancing the program so
consumers in their service jurisdictions can be viably served.
“We will give you the
internet access and you can bring it to your client. Then, they can now enjoy
their electricity and they have internet access,” Masongsong said.
On the part of the
electric cooperatives, the NEA chief also sees the vital impact that the
broadband project will have on them, especially in helping shore up their
incomes.
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