Sun.Star Cebu

STABLE POWER FOR BOHOL BY 2021

The Cebu-Bohol Interconne­ction project, which is expected to be completed by 2021, will add 400 megawatts of power to Bohol

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The power supply in Bohol is expected to stabilize once the National Grid Corporatio­n of the Philippine­s (NGCP) completes the Cebu-Bohol Interconne­ction project.

During the fourth full council meeting of the Regional Developmen­t Council on Friday, Dec. 14, Bohol Gov. Edgar Chatto, former chairman of the RDC 7, said he is set to sign an executive order creating a local coordinati­on team composed of officials from the local government and government agencies concerned.

The team will be under the Bohol Energy Developmen­t Advisory Group will ensure support is given to the NGCP to hasten process of acquiring lots and road right of way.

NGCP corporate communicat­ions and public officer for Cebu and Bohol Betty Martinez said the project cost for the in- terconnect­ion is initially pegged at P21 billion.

Next year, the company will begin topography, parcillary and hydrograph­y surveys, identify the areas where they can erect structures, and identify the owners of these lots.

Once the project is completed, this will add 400 megawatts to Bohol’s power supply. Currently, it only has 90 megawatts.

Martinez said the 138-kilovolt Cebu-Bohol interconne­ction will have a transfer capacity of 90 megawatts.

Chatto said he has discussed the project with Cebu Gov. Hilario Davide III and he will follow up on it to hasten its implementa­tion.

The Cebu-Bohol link, which is expected to be completed in 2021, will cover 29 kilometers of overhead line from the town of Dumanjug until Argao, Cebu, 30 kilometers of submarine cable from Argao to Loon, Bohol, and 26 kilometers overhead line from Loon to the substation in Corella, Bohol.

Martinez said that even with the Cebu-Bohol interconne­ction, the Leyte-Bohol interconne­ction will remain in the grid.

Chatto said the RDC 7 is determined to see the project through, after the series of blackouts Bohol experience­d following the strong earthquake that jolted the province in 2013 and disconnect­ed the province from the grid lines.

Last month, the NGCP also broke ground on the Mindanao-Visayas Interconne­ction Project (MVIP), simultaneo­usly holding the ceremonies on the project’s cable terminal stations in Santander, Cebu, and Dapitan City, Zamboanga del Norte.

The MVIP, provisiona­lly approved by the Energy Regulatory Commission last 2017, is considered the biggest power infrastruc­ture project in the history of the country, the company said in a statement.

Apart from the submarine cables and cable terminal stations, the P52-billion project also entails the installati­on of 526 circuit-kilometers of overhead transmissi­on lines, high-voltage direct current converter stations, and various upgrades to substation­s in both regions.

 ?? FOTO FROM THE NGCP WEBSITE ?? POWER CONNECTION­S. Officials of the National Grid Corporatio­n of the Philippine­s break ground on the Mindanao-Visayas Interconne­ction Project. Aside from connecting the Mindanao and Visayas grids, the NGCP is also set to embark a project connecting the provinces of Cebu and Bohol next year.
FOTO FROM THE NGCP WEBSITE POWER CONNECTION­S. Officials of the National Grid Corporatio­n of the Philippine­s break ground on the Mindanao-Visayas Interconne­ction Project. Aside from connecting the Mindanao and Visayas grids, the NGCP is also set to embark a project connecting the provinces of Cebu and Bohol next year.

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