Times of Oman

In Philippine­s, some advocate a nuclear revival

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MORONG/MANILA: 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 fasttrack 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 200km 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.

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.

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.

Full story @ timesofoma­n.com/world

 ?? - Reuters ?? NEVER USED FACILITY: An interior view of the Bataan Nuclear Power Plant is seen during a tour at the BNPP compound in Morong town, Bataan province, Philippine­s May 11, 2018.
- Reuters NEVER USED FACILITY: An interior view of the Bataan Nuclear Power Plant is seen during a tour at the BNPP compound in Morong town, Bataan province, Philippine­s May 11, 2018.

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