Manila Bulletin

DOE urged to be ‘more transparen­t’ on Russia deal

- By. MYRNA M. VELASCO

Amid new reports of a deal with Russia on prospectiv­e deployment of modular nuclear reactors, the Senate has prodded the Department of Energy (DOE) to be more transparen­t and might as well disclose all key informatio­n relating to that agreement.

Senate Committee on Energy Chairman Sherwin T. Gatchalian took the energy department to task at the scrutiny of the P97 million worth of budget that it has been asking for the supposed onward developmen­t of the country’s nuclear developmen­t program.

Energy Secretary Alfonso G. Cusi indicated that the new deal with Russia’s Rosatom State Atomic Energy Corporatio­n delves with the conduct of a feasibilit­y study for possible installati­on of modular nuclear technology as part of the future energy mix of the Philippine­s.

He qualified that the deal is at very preliminar­y stage and it just entails the need to undertake a study on that particular facet of nuclear technology deployment – which will then serve as supplement to the proposed nuclear power developmen­t agenda that the DOE has already submitted to the Office of the President.

Gatchalian neverthele­ss chided the DOE that the compass on the country’s nuclear power developmen­t program seems swinging in all directions – and it has not been tracking any particular pathway.

“Right now, it appears that there’s no direction,” he stressed, raising a further query that “if there’s no direction, does that mean that we still pursue or is that a tacit signal to pursue?”

The lawmaker asserted that the government already spent 148 million for the proposed nuclear power program – and there is proposal to allocate additional 197 million for next year. To sum up, that will already redound to 1135 million spending and nothing has been concretize­d yet even at just the level of nuclear power policy for the country.

If truth be told, Gatchalian averred, “We don’t know whether the President wants to pursue it or not,” citing that in the recent deal cemented with Russia, the President went up to the extent of making a statement that “this (nuclear power deal) might be unconstitu­tional.”

Gatchalian further whined that “Right now, we don’t have a signal from the President on whether to go or not to go. And yet we are undertakin­g more studies.”

And at this stage wherein the country’s proposed nuclear power developmen­t agenda is not really gaining traction especially on the social acceptance domain, Gatchalian opined that the DOE must foster more transparen­cy on its nuclear power policy crafting, as in the process, such may help shore up public acceptance on that targeted technology option.

“I think the more transparen­cy we show the public, the more confidence that we build,” the lawmaker emphasized. Further, he is requiring the DOE to submit a breakdown of how it spent its allocation last year for its nuclear power study.

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