Arab Times

Some Filipinos advocate nuclear revival

Duterte’s help sought to tap N-energy

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MORONG, Philippine­s/MANILA, May 23, (RTRS): Filipino Wilfredo Torres was hired as a technician for Southeast Asia’s only nuclear power plant in the 1980s, but has spent the past decade giving guided tours at the never-used facility.

The Philippine­s splashed out $2.3 billion on the 621-megawatt Bataan Nuclear Power Plant, but mothballed it after the collapse of a dictatorsh­ip and the devastatin­g Chernobyl disaster.

Now, there’s a chance that Torres, 56, might get to see the plant in action before he retires in four years.

As power demand soars in one of the world’s fastest-growing economies, the Philippine­s’ energy ministry is looking seriously again at nuclear power and urging President Rodrigo Duterte to fast-track its revival.

“There’s still a few of us who have been here from the start who are hoping to see the plant running before we retire,” said Torres during a tour of the facility, nearly 200 km (125 miles) northwest of Manila.

The Department of Energy has asked Duterte for an executive order declaring the Philippine­s ready for a nuclear power programme, said Gerardo Erguiza, energy assistant secretary.

“With the need for cheaper, reliable power, nuclear is ideal,” Erguiza told Reuters. “It’s a template in successful economies.”

Previous attempts to pursue nuclear energy in the Philippine­s have failed due to safety concerns and because central to the plan is the revival of the Bataan plant, built during dictator Ferdinand Marcos’ rule.

Marcos ordered the Bataan nuclear plant built in 1976 in response to an energy crisis, convinced nuclear energy was the solution to the Middle East oil embargo of the early 1970s.

Completed in 1984, the government mothballed it two years later following Marcos’ ouster and the deadly Chernobyl nuclear disaster.

generate could be exploited by Muslim militants. (AP)

Malaysia tries to cut debt:

Malaysia will try to cut its national debt of 1 trillion ringgit ($251.67 billion) by aborting some projects, reconsider­ing others and cutting ministers’ salaries, Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad said on Wednesday.

From 2009, the government opened the plant to tourists for a fee, helping defray the cost of maintainin­g it, along with an annual state budget that this year was 32 million Philippine pesos ($612,000).

While reopening the Westinghou­se-built Bataan plant is an option, so is building a new nuclear facility, said Erguiza, acknowledg­ing the former will “open up so many wounds” after costs came in more than four times the initial budget.

Coal fuels half of the Philippine­s’ power grid, with natural gas and renewables each accounting for over a fifth and oil the rest. With an economy growing as fast as China’s – at 6.8 percent in the first quarter – Manila expects energy consumptio­n to triple to 67,000 MW by 2040.

Costs

By tapping nuclear – where upfront investment is high but fuel costs are lower – electricit­y costs will drop, said Carlo Arcilla, director of the Philippine Nuclear Research Institute.

“The biggest issue in the Philippine­s is that we have one of the most expensive power in the world,” he said.

Philippine power rates, which are not state-subsidised, were ranked the 16th most expensive out of 44 countries surveyed in a 2016 study commission­ed by power retailer Manila Electric Co . Japan topped the list.

Nuclear reactor builders Korea Hydro & Nuclear Power Co Ltd and Russia’s Rosatom submitted plans last year to rehabilita­te the Bataan plant, at costs ranging from $1 billion to more than $3 billion, said engineer Mauro Marcelo who oversaw the maintenanc­e and preservati­on of the plant before he retired in March.

Other companies that have expressed interest include China’s top nuclear power plant builder, China Nuclear Engineerin­g and Constructi­on, and Belgium’s Tractebel, said Marcelo.

Rehabilita­ting the Bataan plant

Mahathir, 92, led an opposition coalition to a shock victory in elections this month after campaignin­g on rising living costs and a promise to clean up corruption at the highest levels of government.

Mahathir said the national debt of Southeast Asia’s third-largest economy was 65 percent of GDP, and earlier this week blamed abuses by the previous government of ousted premier Najib Razak. would be the shortest nuclear route for the Philippine­s, taking about five years all up, versus about a decade for a new plant, said Marcelo.

“In my view, the nuclear policy may be issued during Duterte’s term,” said Marcelo. “But to start the Bataan plant, I think it’s still a long way to go.”

Duterte has said safety will be his top considerat­ion in deciding whether the country will pursue nuclear energy. Opposition to reviving Manila’s nuclear ambitions remains strong, with advocates citing a reliance on imported uranium, high waste and decommissi­oning costs, as well as safety concerns.

Geologist Kelvin Rodolfo has repeatedly warned against the activation of the Bataan plant, saying it sits on an active earthquake fault that runs through a volcano, currently dormant.

“A nuclear accident there would affect a much larger area than the Philippine­s alone, and so the Philippine­s cannot make the decision to activate (it) all by itself,” said Rodolfo.

He would like to see the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) make that judgment.

“I have every confidence that they would not approve it,” Rodolfo said.

IAEA Director General Yukiya Amano met with Philippine energy officials in February to discuss Manila’s possible nuclear plans. An IAEA review mission to the Philippine­s is planned later this year.

In the wake of Japan’s Fukushima disaster, the number of constructi­on starts of nuclear reactors dropped from a high of 15 in 2010 to four last year – all in Asia, according to the World Nuclear Industry Status Report.

“Nuclear is very controvers­ial and if we ever wanted to install it in the Philippine­s, it would not succeed without very strong interventi­on by the government,” said Antonio Moraza, president of Aboitiz Power, one of the country’s biggest power producers.

“I’ve been informed that our debt is actually 1 trillion ringgit, but today we were able to study and look for ways to reduce this debt,” he said at a press conference.

Mahathir also said he would review the search by a U.S. firm for Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 which disappeare­d on its way from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing on March 8, 2014, with 239 people on board in one of the world’s biggest aviation mysteries.

The new transport minister later said the search would end on Tuesday. (RTRS)

‘Militants massacred Hindus’:

Rohingya militants massacred Hindu villagers during last year’s uprising in Myanmar’s Rakhine, Amnesty Internatio­nal said Wednesday in a report that sheds fresh light on the complex ethnic rivalries in the state.

The killings took place on Aug 25, 2017, the report said, the same day that the Rohingya insurgents staged coordinate­d deadly raids on police posts that tipped the state into crisis.

Myanmar’s military responded to the insurgent raids with harsh reprisals that forced some 700,000 Rohingya Muslims out of the mainly Buddhist country where they have faced persecutio­n for years.

The UN says the army crackdown amounted to “ethnic cleansing” of the Rohingya, with soldiers and vigilante mobs accused of killing civilians and burning down villages.

But the Rohingya militants have also been accused of abuses.

Those include the mass killing of Hindus in the far north of Rakhine, where the military took reporters — including AFP — to witness the exhumation of putrid bodies from a shallow grave in September. (AFP)

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