By: Ronnel W. Domingo - 05:12 AM
August 30, 2019
The Department of Energy (DOE) was
called out during a Senate energy committee hearing for its apparent lack of
preparedness to meet the government’s target of universal access to electricity
within the Philippines, according to Sen. Sherwin Gatchalian.
Gatchalian, who chairs the
committee, said this happened during a recent hearing on Sen. Bill No. 175,
which is the proposed law that pushes the use of microgrid systems for yet
unenergized areas across the archipelago.
The lawmaker said in a statement the
DOE had not yet submitted its comprehensive rollout plan in pursuing the
country’s total electrification agenda, despite the agency’s promise to provide
them with concrete data during previous hearings as early as 2016.
Gathalian noted that there were
still more than two million households in the country —about 16 percent of
total—that needed access to electricity.
“We are waiting for your (DOE’s)
commitment but 2022 is fast approaching,” he said. “We need to have that kind
of strategy and we need that kind of budget.”
Earlier this week, the National
Electrification Administration (NEA) said MalacaƱang was asking Congress for
just P1.5 billion to bankroll the agency’s sitio electrification program. NEA’s
own proposal is for a budget of P6.1 billion.
NEA administrator Edgardo Masongsong
said there were still close to 15,000 sitios or hamlets that had no
electricity, and this would need P22 billion in funding.
The DOE itself is asking for a 2020
budget of P2.3 billion, of which P500 million will be used for electrification
projects.
“Our budgetary request will support
plans and programs that would help ensure the security of our country’s energy
future, increase access to energy services and technologies, further uphold
consumer welfare, and facilitate the efficient implementation of new energy
policies such as the Energy Efficiency and Conservation Act, the Murang Kuryente
Act, and the Energy Virtual One-Stop Shop Act,” Energy Secretary Alfonso Cusi
said.
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