Rainier Allan Ronda (The Philippine
Star) - June 13, 2019 - 12:00am
MANILA, Philippines — The Department
of Energy (DOE) should make up its mind fast on whether to include nuclear
power in the country’s energy mix in view of looming depletion of the Malampaya
natural gas field by 2024, the Philippine nuclear science chief said.
Carlo Arcilla, executive director of
the Department of Science and Technology-Philippine Nuclear Research Institute
(DOST-PNRI), said the matter should be given urgency as the resources at
Malampaya are continuously being exhausted, and no new drilling is being done
in the West Philippine Sea due to the ongoing territorial dispute with China.
“They have yet to come out with a
national position on nuclear energy. It has been on their desk for more than
two years,” Arcilla said in his presentation on nuclear power at the
DOST-Philippine Council for Industry, Energy and Emerging Technology Research
and Development (PCIEERD) and Chamber of Mines of the Philippines lecture
series last Friday at the Marco Polo Hotel Ortigas.
“Ang DOE, hindi mo sila maintindihan
eh (The DOE, you can’t understand them),” Arcilla lamented.
Safety concerns have prevented the
country from tapping nuclear power for its energy needs.
Arcilla said several years are
needed for preparations on the direction DOE takes on energy policy, with the
deadline made more imminent because of the expected depletion of the Malampaya
gas project that supplies fuel to around 40 percent of gas-fired plants in
Luzon: the Ilijan, Sta. Rita, San Lorenzo, San Gabriel and Avion plants, which
supply 3,211 megawatts to the grid.
“We should have something in place
to replace the power supply that will be lost when Malampaya runs out,” he
said.
Arcilla warned that the current
solution being offered by the DOE – the importation of natural gas – could keep
power rates expensive.
“They should consider that the
decision should result in making electricity cheaper, and not more expensive.
We already have expensive electricity. This is the reason why we don’t have
much manufacturing here in the country,” Arcilla said.
“If they’re going to say LNG
(liquefied natural gas), fine. But that will not lower the cost. And you will
probably make some rich people even richer,” he said.
The Digging Deeper mining lecture
series was organized by PCIEERD and CMP to discuss the possible move into
value-added processing of ores to generate more revenue from the country’s
mineral wealth.
No comments:
Post a Comment