By BusinessMirror
May 5, 2020
Glicerio
Candido Jr., one of the facility operations shift leads of geothermal leader
Energy Development Corporation (EDC), has been working on night duty at the
Tongonan Geothermal Power Plant in Leyte. He is part of a rotating set of teams
that work and live onsite in the company’s temporary housing facility for two
weeks, after which another team will replace them for another two weeks.
Similarly,
Earl Arsua, a senior production engineer assigned in EDC’s Upper Mahiao Power
Plant, had to put on hold his usual playtime with his two daughters when he
started his 14-day work away from home schedule. Good thing that EDC has
provided comfortable sleeping quarters and WiFi access to make sure that
physical distance was not a hindrance to keeping in touch with his loved ones.
This has
been their new, though interim, way of working as members of EDC’s own
frontliners who help the company ensure its uninterrupted supply of clean,
renewable energy for the country amid the Coronavirus disease (COVID-19)
pandemic.
“We have
been strictly practicing physical distancing and wearing PPE [personal
protective equipment] on and off duty. Though we are away from our families, I
think we’re in a better position now since it’s safer here. We have less
exposure to crowded places and our families are also away from the possible
threat of the virus that we could get if we will continue commuting to and from
work,” said Candido.
Both he
and Arsua are thankful to the company for looking out for the welfare of
employees such as them more so in the time of this COVID-19 crisis. They
appreciate EDC’s continued financial support in terms of their salary and other
additional benefits.
“Dapat
nga po magpasalamat pa tayo sa company na may work pa tayo. ‘Yung iba nga
nawala ‘yung trabaho nila at wala nang kita, kawawa naman ‘yung family nila [We
should be thankful to the company because we are still able to work. Others
have been laid-off and they have no income to provide for their family’s
needs],” Candido added.
With all
Filipinos affected by COVID-19 and no clear signs yet of the definitive end to
this pandemic, EDC management and the rest of its workforce have been fully
committed to keeping the lights on for its customers.
EDC
President and Chief Operating Officer Richard B. Tantoco emphasized the
country’s need for power to ensure that industries, especially healthcare
facilities working hard to treat patients afflicted with the deadly disease,
will have a steady supply of electricity: “I cannot stress this enough, that we
need to keep our plants running for as long as we can and right now. How can
hospital Intensive Care Units function without energy? How can oxygen tanks be
filled for hospital use if our power is not available?”
The
company has also been going through great lengths to provide not only
work-related and financial provision but even emotional support to its
employees amid the lockdown that is enforced not only in Luzon but even in
other parts of the country. It has likewise committed to find ways to
continuously compensate its project workers such as drivers, pantry and office
maintenance, security, and others who have been affected by the company’s shift
to non-office operations.
In turn,
numerous employees have been paying it forward either through the company’s
fundraising activities for frontliners and daily contractors like drivers,
office cleaners and security guards or through their personal efforts in their
respective communities. EDC employee donations to ABS-CBN’s Pantawid ng
Pag-ibig have already reached over P1.9 million to date.
EDC is
also involved in raising P100 million for quarantine facilities for returning
seafarers and overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) inside Pier 15 at the Manila
South Harbor, as well as a joint project with Narvacan, Ilocos Sur Mayor Luis
“Chavit” Singson and The Medical City that provided temporary shelter at the
Metrotent COnvention Center for employees of the hospital.
EDC has
provided a total of P12 million worth of assistance to its partner local
government units (LGUs) and communities, which included the lending of 20- to
40-foot container vans that public hospitals are now using either as quarantine
facilities for COVID-19 patients or as sleeping quarters for its medical
frontliners. The company has also donated sacks of rice good for 14,000
households and provided masks, thermal scanners, personal protective equipment
and other items to medical frontliners and those who are manning checking
points in its areas of operation.
EDC’s
1,475MW total installed capacity generates 37% of the country’s total renewable
energy, with its 1,181MW geothermal portfolio accounting for 61% of the
country’s total installed geothermal capacity and putting the Philippines on
the map as the world’s 3rd largest geothermal producer.
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