By:
Doris Dumlao-Abadilla - Reporter/ 05:20 AM August 24, 2018
Transmission
superhighway operator National Grid Corp. of the Philippines (NGCP) has denied
having discussions with Laguna-based electronics manufacturer Cirtek Holdings
Philippines Corp. on using the national grid for mobile infrastructure.
“Apart from a
tripartite agreement with the Department of Information and Communications
Technology (DICT) and National Transmission Corp. (Transco) signed in June,
NGCP is not involved in any talks regarding partnership for the use of its
transmission network as telecommunications backbone,” NGCP said in a statement.
It was earlier reported
that Cirtek was in discussions with NGCP and the Department of Energy on how
existing transmission assets could be harnessed into a telecommunication
infrastructure.
NGCP is a privately
owned corporation in charge of operating, maintaining and developing the
country’s state-owned power grid, an interconnected system that transmits
electricity from where it is made to where it is needed.
“The operation of the
power transmission grid, including all its inherent parts, belongs exclusively
to NGCP. As transmission service provider, and in accordance with NGCP’s rights
under its concession agreement and its franchise under Republic Act No. 9511,
NGCP should be the primary counterpart to any proposal for the use of the
transmission facilities,” NGCP said.
“As of Aug. 22, no
discussions at any level have been made by NGCP with Cirtek Holdings
Philippines or any of its authorized representatives,” it added.
The tripartite
agreement signed in June advanced the government’s plan to provide high-speed
and inexpensive internet to public areas. The pact unlocks 6,154 kilometers of
“dark” or spare fiber lines from Luzon to Mindanao, the commercial use of which
was the subject of a long-running dispute between Transco and NGCP. These dark
fiber lines are currently used by Transco and NGCP to monitor their electricity
distribution points around the country.
With a deal in place,
DICT can use the fiber lines for its key initiatives such as the National
Broadband Project and its goal of providing free Wi-Fi connectivity to
thousands of public sites such as schools and hospitals in the next few years.
Eliseo Rio Jr., acting
secretary of the DICT, said they could now reach even the most remote areas in
the Philippines.
“Around 40 percent of
the country is underserved or unserved by the commercial telcos,” Rio said,
referring to the duopoly of PLDT Inc. and Globe Telecom, which do not see
certain areas as viable enough for them to enter.
Under the agreement,
the DICT obtained an “indefeasible right” to use or access certain spare fiber
optic cores, vacant lots, tower spaces and related facilities of NGCP, which is
the concessionaire of Transco, the owner of the country’s power transmission
assets.
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