posted July 12, 2020 at
10:10 pm by Manila Standard
The
city government of Ormoc in Leyte has sealed an agreement with Lopez-owned
geothermal energy leader Energy Development Corporation (EDC) and non-stock,
non-profit OSPA Farmers Medical Center (FMC) for the creation of a molecular
diagnostic center.
This
will enable more timely reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction
(RT-PCR) testing of COVID-19 swab samples from residents not only in Ormoc but
from nearby provinces.
EDC
donated the RT-PCR equipment worth about P25 million to Ormoc’s first COVID-19
testing facility that will be operated and maintained by OSPA-FMC, the most
modern tertiary hospital in Leyte.
The
agreement was signed by Ormoc City Mayor Richard I. Gomez and Vice Mayor Leo
Carmelo Locsin Jr., OSPA–FMC vice president lawyer Roy Bernard Fiel, and EDC
management led by president and chief operating officer Richard B. Tantoco.
Secretary
Vivencio “Vince” B. Dizon, Deputy Chief Implementer of the Inter-Agency Task
Force on Emerging Infectious Diseases against COVID-19, witnessed the
signing.
According
to Gomez, the laboratory will greatly expedite the processing of COVID-19 swab
samples, which previously required up to ten days.
“We
can get our results in less than a day,” he said. “This project will bring good
news to the beautiful people of Ormoc City. This is something we really need in
this time of crisis.”
For
its part, EDC reiterated its commitment to improve the lives of
Ormocanons.
“We
are very privileged to have an opportunity to address a clear gap for Ormoc
City, the western part of Leyte, the province of Biliran, and Southern Leyte,
that of having an RT-PCR testing center,” said Tantoco.
“While Ormoc City leadership does its job, we too strive to do ours, which is
to provide around 40% of the electricity of the entire Visayas that is so
necessary now, particularly with remote work and the increased demands on our
healthcare system,” he added.
EDC
owns and operates the 711-megawatt Leyte Geothermal Project, the company’s
biggest facility that straddles Ormoc City and the municipality of Kananga and
utilizes the largest known geothermal wet steamfield in the world.
It
comprises the Malitbog geothermal power station, the world’s largest geothermal
power plant, along with the Upper Mahiao, Mahanagdong A and B plants, and the
36-year-old Tongonan power plant, which is one of EDC’s oldest geothermal power
plants.
In
total, EDC generates over 40% of the Philippines’ renewable energy output and
serves about 10% of the country’s overall electricity demand with its installed
capacity of 1,473.3MW. Its 1,179MW geothermal portfolio accounts for 61% of the
country’s total installed geothermal capacity, putting the Philippines on the
map as the world’s third-largest geothermal power producer.
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