By: Leila B. Salaverria - 05:24 AM
October 11, 2019
With President Rodrigo Duterte
giving no explicit approval to tap nuclear sources of energy, the Senate
finance subcommittee asked the Department of Energy (DOE) to detail what would
be covered by the P97 million it was asking for next year’s budget.
Sen. Sherwin Gatchalian, who chaired
the panel’s hearing on the DOE budget, noted that the agency was given P48
million in 2019 for nuclear-related studies. The DOE, he said, must submit a
detailed explanation on how the money was spent and what it would do with the
P97 million it was asking for 2020.
“I agree (that) this is a very
complex source of power; we need to undertake many researches. But we need to
also have some cutoff whether to pursue (this) or not because we can’t keep on
spending almost every year,” Gatchalian said.
Energy Secretary Alfonso Cusi said
the DOE was waiting for the President’s decision on the government’s nuclear
policy, which in turn would be supported by a feasibility study by Rusatom
Overseas.
The Philippine government recently
signed a memorandum of intent with the Russian state company on the possibility
of bringing nuclear energy to the Philippines.
“There is no explicit approval that
we go nuclear. What the DOE is doing is just looking at all the alternative
sources of energy considering the vulnerability of the country, and what we
would like to attain in having energy security,” Cusi told the Senate.
“We are just preparing the country
(and checking) if we can put nuclear in our energy mix,” Cusi added.
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