By: Hazel P. Villa, Orlando Gamilla
Jr. - 05:19 AM March 11, 2019
YOUTH SUPPORT A coalition of youth
organizations and environmental advocates in Negros Occidental assembles on
March 6 at the provincial capitol to press for an ordinance to give a coal-free
declaration the force of law. —CLAUDIA GANCAYCO/CONTRIBUTOR
BACOLOD CITY — A coalition of five
youth groups in Negros Occidental expressed support for a decision to declare
the province off limits to coal power plants and press for the passage of a measure
that would give the declaration the force of law.
Youth for Climate Hope (Y4CH) said
although Gov. Alfredo Marañon Jr.’s executive order declaring the province to
be coal-free was not law, it was a “strong policy statement.”
The governor’s policy, the group
said, could translate into stronger ordinances.
“This is only the beginning,” said
Krishna Ariola, 21, one of the leaders of Y4CH.
“We will continue to fight” until Marañon’s
executive order becomes an ordinance, she added.
Weekly rallies
Y4CH has been protesting plans by
Global Power Holdings Corp., the power arm of conglomerate San Miguel Corp., to
install a 300-megawatt circulating fluidized bed coal-fired power plant at the
villages of Palampas and Punaw in San Carlos City, Negros Occidental.
The group has been holding protest
rallies outside the provincial capitol in Bacolod City every Wednesday since
Feb. 13.
It timed the rallies for regular
sessions of the provincial board to press the local lawmaking body to pass a
law against the construction of coal-fired power plants in Negros Occidental.
The group rejoiced when Marañon, who
was serving his last term as governor, signed Executive Order No. 19-08 which
declared that the province would continue to pursue clean and renewable energy
projects and oppose the entry or establishment of any coal-fired power plant.
Model province
Ariola said the province didn’t have
a single coal plant but has several sources of renewable energy such as solar
plants in the cities of Cadiz, San Carlos and La Carlota.
“We aim to keep it that way,” Ariola
said.
“We can be a model province” for
renewable energy in the country, she said.
Ariola added, though, that such a
dream could come true only if the government and the private sector invested in
renewable energy technology and upgraded the province’s power transmission
lines.
Investment
She also called on the youth in the
province to support the call for clean sources of energy.
“We are all in this together. Let’s
not wait for the day when it becomes too late to act,” Ariola said.
“While we’re still here, and while
we still can, we should use our voices, our skills and our intellect to demand
justice for our communities,” she added.
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