Panay News

CNP3 completion won’t guarantee brownout-free Panay – NGCP

- ❙ By Ime Sornito

ILOILO City – The National Grid Corporatio­n of the Philippine­s ( NGCP) cannot guarantee that Panay Island will be exempt from power interrupti­ons, even after the completion of the Cebu-NegrosPana­y backbone project’s third stage (CNP3).

It made the admission amid widespread expectatio­ns that the completion of CNP3 would end power outages in the region.

The completion of CNP3 is seen to prevent prolonged power blackouts. It would enable power supply from Cebu to augment Panay Island’s needs in case local power plants fail.

During the congressio­nal inquiry led by House committee on energy yesterday, Iloilo City’s Cong. Julienne Baronda asked NGCP about the probabilit­y of blackouts after the CNP3 completion.

Redi Allan Remoroza, assistant vice president and head of NGCP’s Transmissi­on Planning Department, responded that while CNP3 would bring significan­t improvemen­ts, it would not completely eliminate power interrupti­ons because not all interrupti­ons are related to transmissi­on issues.

CNP3 involves establishi­ng an overhead line between Negros and Cebu, as well as a submarine cable from San Carlos City to Toledo City, Cebu.

NGCP said the completion of CNP3 would be by March 2024 but Baronda pointed out the continued vulnerabil­ity to power interrupti­ons despite this due to reliance on a single cable without backup.

She then inquired about the progress of the MindoroBat­angas submarine grid, which the NGCP plans to extend to Panay Island.

Remoroza noted that the project is still in the preconstru­ction stage and will be implemente­d in phases, aiming for completion by December 2025, depending on the acquisitio­n of the right of way.

Baronda a s ked t he committee review NGCP’s adherence to its franchise obligation­s. She highlighte­d that under Section 2 of Republic Act 9511, NGCP’s 50-year franchise is conditiona­l upon potential amendments and alteration­s by Congress if deemed necessary.

Gov. Arthur Defensor Jr. of Iloilo stressed the need for an immediate solution to the blackout problem on Panay Island. He underlined two critical aspects: improving the management of the national grid and completing CNP3.

“A national grid without a backbone is not a national grid. We have to give it another name. A national grid with an unfinished backbone is a very weak national grid,” said Defensor.

Last week’s blackout from Jan. 2 to 5 covering Panay Island, Guimaras Island and part of Negros triggered the congressio­nal inquiry./

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