Oman Daily Observer

Can a push to power Philippine­s turn greener?

- ALANAH TORRALBA

In battling the timber poachers who roam the thick Sierra Madre forests near his home, Larry Garaes has found a new ally: solar panels. With solar chargers, the radios he and other forest rangers rely on no longer run out of power on multi-day operations in the mountains, he said. “Communicat­ion between rangers is a lot better. Now, we can catch the poachers while they are in the act because we can coordinate our moves quietly without resorting to shouting at the next ranger — unlike before,” he said.

Access to clean energy is bringing a range of unexpected benefits around the world. On the longest mountain range in the Philippine­s, those benefits include better forest protection — and power for tribal people who once lacked it.

More than two million households — or about 10 per cent of all households — in the Philippine­s lack electricit­y, according to a 2017 report by the country’s Department of Energy.

About three quarters are in remote rural locations, in a country spread over thousands of islands, according to the Small Power Utilities Group (SPUG), which is trying to get them connected.

Because bringing the national grid power to many of those people is not cost effective, the state National Power Corporatio­n has charged SPUG with setting up and running small power plants in these areas.

So far 327 such plants have been establishe­d, according to the National Power Corporatio­n.

Government plans call for 100 per cent electrific­ation of the country by 2022.

“Government has to do its work to connect all those areas that are not yet connected to the grid,” said Edmundo Veloso Jr, the head of the National Power Corporatio­n’s SPUG unit.

But all but one of the new generation plants use diesel fuel, he said — even though transport of fuel can be a big problem in remote areas.

Diesel is “the fastest and the only technology available at the moment for off-grid areas. Diesel is still the cheapest in terms of capital outlay,” he said.

In Garaes’ community, however, in Bulacan province in the northern Philippine­s, two solar micro-grids are providing the community’s first power.

They were put in place last December by the Forest Foundation Philippine­s, a non-government­al organisati­on that aims to improve forest protection, and the Centre for Renewable Energy and Sustainabl­e Technology (CREST), a Quezon City-based organisati­on focused on expanding use of clean power.

While the new grid was primarily set up to help members of the local Dumagat ethnic group police the forests, it also supplies power free of charge to common areas of the village of 36 families, including a study hall and communal kitchens.

The forest rangers and other members of the community have been trained to troublesho­ot and maintain the system, CREST officials said.

Urbano Mendiola Jr, vice-president for corporate affairs at the National Power Corporatio­n, said his agency was considerin­g installing hybrid power plants that combine diesel and solar power in some remote areas. A hybrid plant to power about 1,250 households costs about $985,000, he said, while a diesel-only plant costs about $425,000.

But while hybrid plants are more expensive to set up at the moment, they bring cost savings in the long run because energy from the sun is free, he said.

He said the company is not setting up solar-only plants in remote areas at the moment because of the cost of the batteries needed to store solar power and provide energy at night.

Rural off-grid power plants in the Philippine­s are funded by the government and by a small surcharge on the electrical bills of grid power users, aimed at bringing the cost of power for rural users closer in line with that in urban areas.

Access to clean energy is bringing a range of unexpected benefits around the world. On the longest mountain range in Philippine­s, those benefits include better forest protection — and power for tribal people who once lacked it

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