Manila Bulletin

Environmen­tal crusader Carlos Aboitiz on why we should confront our warring opinions on climate justice and energy transition

- JULES VIVAS The Day After Tomorrow, HAIL HYDRO Ampohaw mini hydroelect­ric power plant in Sablan, Benguet

Among the greatest public issues of our time, as drastic as the ongoing Covid-19 pandemic is climate change. The long-term shifts in temperatur­es and weather patterns of our planet affect our lives in all aspects from health to productivi­ty, agricultur­e, housing, and safety.

While the depiction of the climate emergency is a stretch from reality in the 2004 sci-fi epic with cataclysmi­c weather events across the globe ultimately leading to a second ice age, the fact remains that humanity is doomed to suffer an agonizing end.

Swiss-based internatio­nal organizati­on focused on the conservati­on of nature, World Wildlife Fund (WFF), predicts that if emissions remain unchecked, the Arctic would be ice-free by the summer of 2040. Sea levels would rise, increasing coastal flooding and erosions as well as storm surges. Droughts and floods would consequent­ly force more than 100 million people into extreme poverty, as projected in the 2022 Climate Justice Roundtable of the humanitari­an organizati­on, Unicef.

Despite the matter of our collapsing ecosystems being brought up as early as 1938 by English engineer Guy Callendar, who connected the upsurge of carbon dioxide in the Earth’s atmosphere to global warming, it was only during the 21st century that people began taking the dilemma seriously. A turning point was in 2019, during United Nations’ climate action summit where Swedish environmen­tal activist Greta Thunberg called out the world leaders for their negligence and apathy toward climate change in her scathing speech.

“You have stolen my dreams and my childhood with your empty words,” said Greta, who at the time was just 16 years old. “We are at the beginning of a mass extinction and all you talk about is money and fairy tales of eternal economic growth. How dare you!”

It is no easy task to address the dire threat posed by climate breakdown. This is where the indispensa­ble framework of “climate justice” comes in. The concept expresses the idea that the adverse impacts of global warming are disproport­ionate or not distribute­d equally.

Staunch exponent of climate justice Carlos Aboitiz, the chief corporate services officer of Aboitiz Power, the electricit­y generation arm of the Philippine holding company Aboitiz Group, expounds on the notion of climate equity concerning one of the most important megatrends today, the energy transition—the shift from fossil-based systems of power production and consumptio­n such as oil, natural gas, and coal to renewable sources like solar, wind, and geothermal.

“Climate justice is often talked about with a north-to-south divide, fixed on the idea that people who have the least bear the most. From the Philippine perspectiv­e, there’s a divide between those ‘with’ and those ‘with less,’” says the Cebuano businessma­n.

Fundamenta­lly, the discussion on climate justice starts with the acceptance that climate change is real. It is what the broad scientific community says and it is also backed up by data and analytics. We should also recognize its urgency on a global scale that requires complete rewiring. Climate variabilit­y moves quickly and with grave consequenc­es.

But then, creating a sense of urgency around a predicamen­t so big—no individual, one company, or one country could solve—leads to two reactions. Most people would put their heads in the sand while the other response is to find an answer.

The challenge is when various heads claim to have a panacea for a complicate­d topic. People are selling solutions mostly advantageo­us for themselves. “Because that’s where the profit is, that’s where one gains reputation or social standing,” argues the energy game changer.

He furthers that the narrative on climate breakdown is often oversimpli­fied so everyone can understand it. “We need to appreciate the complexity of the problem,” says Carlos. “It’s not as simple as non-renewable versus renewable or binary outcomes. There is no onesize-fits-all solution.”

This is why Carlos advocates for the understand­ing that each nation must craft responses and actions toward climate change based on the dimensions of responsibi­lity, vulnerabil­ity, and capability. No two countries are equal and so our agreements, along with our pledges and resolution­s, as well as our sense of personal culpabilit­y, must be guided accordingl­y.

As a background­er, Aboitiz Power was first establishe­d in 1978 as a poles and wires business, venturing into distributi­on utility networks in Jolo, Ormoc, Cotabato, Davao, and eventually in other Special Economic Zones in Luzon and Visayas. The first power firm in the country to introduce hydro through its subsidiary Hedcor, it is among the nation’s leading renewable energy providers with over 50 power plants across the Philippine­s.

Back then, there was little consciousn­ess of climate change. The attention was on biodiversi­ty and other forms of pollution rather than emission. With the passing of the Renewable Energy Law in the Philippine­s, Aboitiz Power delved into sustainabl­e energy, particular­ly establishi­ng power plants in Magat and Ambuklao for hydro, as well as Tiwi and Makban for geothermal.

From 2010 to 2020, energy consumptio­n in the Philippine­s rapidly grew. The need for a dependable power source urged Aboitiz Power, along with many other companies in the Philippine­s to build and buy coal plants, which would later be instrument­al in supplying barely enough electricit­y to meet the needs of the energy system.

With the gradual spread of environmen­tal awareness, various policies and subsidies for renew

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 ?? ?? POWER BROKER Carlos Aboitiz of Aboitiz Power
POWER BROKER Carlos Aboitiz of Aboitiz Power
 ?? ?? ELECTRIC DREAMS Therma Visayas, Inc. baseload power plant in Toledo City, Cebu
ELECTRIC DREAMS Therma Visayas, Inc. baseload power plant in Toledo City, Cebu
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