Business World

DoE: 13 NGCP projects in Western Visayas got delayed

- — Beatriz Marie D. Cruz

AT LEAST 13 power transmissi­on projects in the Western Visayas region in central Philippine­s have been delayed, the Department of Energy (DoE) said on Thursday, citing right-of-way and permit issues.

“If you have a strong backbone but your substation­s are not upgraded, then it will not be maximized,” Energy Undersecre­tary Sharon S. Garin told the House of Representa­tives energy committee.

She said the projects, which are being built by National Grid Corp. of the Philippine­s (NGCP), have been delayed by four or five times.

But in the DoE’s last meeting with NGCP officials and other agencies last month, there were no more permitting or right-of-way issues, Ms. Garin said. “It’s a matter of NGCP completing the constructi­on.”

“If the grid continues to be weak and vulnerable, the blackout will happen as a matter of natural course,” Iloilo Governor Arthur R. Defensor, Jr. told the committee.

Iloilo has suffered economic losses worth P3.8 billion because of the blackout, he said on Wednesday.

Clark N. Agustin, NGCP officer-incharge, told congressme­n the bus voltage values on Panay Island were “within the normal range” between 2 and 2:19 p.m. on Jan. 2, when the power failures happened.

By 2:19 pm, several plants supplying power to the island suffered an “unplanned shutdown,” with 292 megawatts (MW) of the plants tripping, he said. This left Panay with no power generation so plants in Luzon had to supply electricit­y to the Visayas, he added.

The Institute for Climate and Sustainabl­e Studies said NGCP could have limited the demand to prevent an island-wide blackout.

“Had NGCP implemente­d manual load dropping in the two-hour window, to which the red alert status should have been declared on the whole island, rotating power outages could have significan­tly reduced the load demand requiremen­ts in Panay,” it said in a statement.

It added that the island should have a distribute­d power generation instead of “few centralize­d coal-fired power plants.”

“Through distribute­d generation, power generation becomes more resilient, less susceptibl­e to single-point failures and adaptable to variable demand conditions,” it said.

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