Manila Bulletin

100MW Subic solar plant connects to Luzon grid

- By MYRNA M. VELASCO

The 100-megawatt peak (MWp) Subic solar farm of Filipino firm JobinSQM, Inc. (JSI) has been authorized to connect and wheel its capacity to the Luzon grid via the 230-kilovolt (kV) substation of the National Grid Corporatio­n of the Philippine­s (NGCP) in Subic, Zambales.

The developer-firm JSI of the solar facility is a subsidiary of Emerging Power, Inc. (EPI), the power generation company of the Zamora group, which is also into mining and banking among other businesses.

The nature of approval rendered by the Energy Regulatory Commission (ERC) warrants the installati­on of a “dedicated point-to-point limited facilities to connect the 100MWp power project to the Luzon grid.”

It has been noted that by transmitti­ng the solar facility’s electricit­y output, it will not only increase electricit­y supply to the grid but such will also support the government’s bid to hike the share of renewables in the country’s energy mix.

The total project cost had been pegged at 11.034 billion – comprising of the connection assets of JSI at 1774.029 million; and the needed upgrade and modificati­on of the NGCP Subic substation costing 1260.439 million.

On ensuring the technical integrity of the connection facility, JSI has commission­ed MN Electro Industrial Supply & Services as the third party entity that had undertaken system impact study “to determine the technical feasibilit­y of connecting the 100MW solar power plant to the Luzon grid.”

The company has similarly engaged the services of S.L. Developmen­t Constructi­on Corporatio­n and Harty Inc. for the supply, constructi­on and installati­on of the prescribed connection facilities.

In the ERC ruling, it specified that while the assets connected to the NGCP substation in Subic also serve other customers like the SubicEnron power plant, such cannot be considered a dedicated point-to-point facility.

Neverthele­ss, the power industry regulator qualified that the facilities intended for the 100MWp solar plant of JSI can be single-handedly classified as dedicated point-to-point facility as underpinne­d by the provisions of the Electric Power Industry Reform Act.

The ERC thus emphasized that “as to the assets connecting JSI’s 100 MWp solar power plant to NGCP’s Subic substation, these assets are dedicated point-to-point limited facilities qualified under Section 9 of EPIRA.”

The regulatory agency further decreed that “if these assets are removed or cut, only JSI will be disconnect­ed since these are solely used by JSI’s generating facility.”

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