Philippine Daily Inquirer / 05:15 AM
January 10, 2019
BAGUIO CITY — Electric cooperatives,
which operate using electronic remote systems, have been tapped to bring
internet services to interior provinces and towns, beginning with Benguet
province.
The Department of Information and
Communications Technology (DICT) on Tuesday signed a memorandum of agreement
(MOA) with the Benguet Electric Cooperative Inc. (Beneco) for the use of its
fiber optic network as digital transmission lines.
The MOA will enforce a national
broadband plan to bring social services to remote areas through the internet,
according to DICT Undersecretary Denis Villorente.
Beneco has over 200 kilometers of
fiber optic cable lines, which allow it to remotely access, control and manage
its electricity distribution stations in 13 Benguet towns.
Beneco is also preparing to read
meters remotely through the fiber optic system.
By using the existing
infrastructure, DICT and other agencies can connect digitally with local
governments and open programs for communities, which are difficult to reach
because of terrain, such as in the Cordillera, Villorente said.
Earlier, the National Grid
Corporation of the Philippines and the National Transmission Corporation loaned
their underutilized or unused fiber optic cable networks to the DICT to
implement the broadband plan, said DICT Assistant Secretary Alan Silor.
But Energy Secretary Alfonso Cusi
and former University of the Philippines electrical engineering professor,
Rowaldo del Mundo, had suggested using Beneco’s systems to test the plan,
Villorente said.
He said the Beneco project would
initially link 13 government agencies in Baguio and La Trinidad, Benguet’s
capital town, and public hospitals, public schools, the regional police and
vital installations like the weather monitoring station at Mount Santo Tomas.
The weather station has been
transmitting data much faster to allow disaster management teams to plan for
potential storms, Villorente said.
DICT has granted Beneco with 1,000
Mbps (megabits per second), the downloading or uploading speed it is now able
to access.
Partnership
The government is prepared to
partner with 29 other power utilities with fiber optic networks, said Deputy
Administrator Rossan Rosero-Lee of the National Electrification Administration.
Eventually, all 121 electric
cooperatives would be “instrumental to bringing the internet to the farthest
areas in the countryside,” she said.
Villorente said establishing a
digital network comes hand-in-hand with other features of e-governance, such as
the national ID system that would start this year.
The government will also help
improve consumer confidence in digital payment mechanisms, he said.
Del Mundo said using electric
cooperatives to bring the internet to outlying provinces was linked to the
notion that electricity was one of the most important human rights.
“One of the first [United Nations]
declarations is that access to electricity is a human right [because] it
improves the quality of life and is the development backbone for all
countries,” he said.
“Beneco [and other electric
cooperatives] will now ensure that everybody will have access to the internet,”
he said. —Vincent Cabreza
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