Sun.Star Pampanga

Floating Solar Farms On visiting the bed-ridden

- (First part)

I read in the news that the Board of Investment­s has granted green lane endorsemen­t for the P22.6-billion Pantabanga­n Floating Solar Power Plant of Fuego Renewable Energy Corporatio­n (FREC). This means that the process to grant permits and licenses for the project will be expedited. The floating solar project will use 500 hectares of the Pantabanga­n Lake in Nueva Ecija, or about 12.5% of the 4,000-hectare lake. It will be producing 464 Megawatts alternatin­g current (MWac) of clean power and is scheduled for commission­ing next year.

Why floating solar farms? One major hindrance to solar energy is the huge tracts of land needed to put up solar farms. In today’s technology, around one hectare of land is needed for every megawatt (MW) of power. Look at the Raslag’s 23MW solar farm in Mexico, Pampanga which is along the NLEX for you to have an idea of what I’m talking about. The good news is that new solar panels are more efficient and can generate more electricit­y for the same size. This means new solar farms will require less space.

To maximize the use of land, some countries integrate solar farms and agricultur­e. Solar panels are elevated to provide space underneath that can be used for planting crops or

animal grazing. Another strategy, which by far is the most common, is to install solar panels in bodies of water, hence the term floating solar farms.

The FREC Project is claimed to be the first large scale floating solar farm in the Philippine­s. There are others that are already operating on a pilot scale. In 2019, SN Aboitiz Power (SNAP) placed 732 solar panels in a 52-meter floating ring in a 2,500 square meter area of the Magat Dam Reservoir. It has a capacity to generate 200-kw of electricit­y. This small-scale installati­on is designed to test how the facility will withstand the rain and wind, typhoons, and strong inflows. I learned from an online article that SNAP is conducting a feasibilit­y study for a 67 MW facility.

There’s another pilot project at Laguna Lake installed by SunAsia Energy, a Philippine-based solar developer, and Blueleaf Energy. These companies have been selected by the Department of Energy to build and operate six large-scale floating solar projects at Laguna Lake totaling 610.5MW.

The Ayala-led ACEN Corp. is set to develop its first largescale floating solar project also on Laguna Lake. The company signed a renewable energy contract area utilizatio­n agreement with the Laguna Lake Developmen­t Authority (LLDA) to lease 800 hectares in the country’s largest freshwater lake. The LLDA is offering 2,000 hectares in Laguna De Bay for floating solar projects.

Another company, Zonal Renewables, has announced plans to construct a 100 MW floating solar power farm in Cadiz city, located in the province of Negros Occidental, Philippine­s, as reported by the Philippine News Agency. The farm will be built on a 90-hectare fishpond.

(To be continued)

ONE of the endearing factors of Mabalacat City Mayor Crisostomo C. Garbo’s medical assistance program is the regular visitation­s of the city residents who are seriously sick and bed-ri dden.

Always aware of the importance of close medical care and attention his constituen­ts need, MCG always finds time in his busy schedule to set aside one day in a week to seek out the bed-ridden and there and then finds out what the petients need and he readily delivers what is necessary.

Such is the peculiarit­y of MCG Cares which by the way has a program on RW 95.1 FM with the same title aired weekly.

At the Mayor’s office, there is a steady flow of callers who seek medical assistance, care and treatment.

At the ground floor of the city hall in Xevera is the social assistance office headed by Sy Balagtas who attends to hundreds of city residents with varying medical needs an assistance. There, those who need financial assistance are attended to.

MCG, by far, is the only local chief executive who has launched this special type of medical assistance to constituen­ts, aside of course from Pampanga Vice Governor Lilia @Nanay Baby Pineda who has been attending to the needs of her province mates for a long time now.

£ £ £ To reach out to far-flung areas in the city, MCG has establishe­d medical teams which are to serve rural folks and other residents. The medical teams are composed of men and women from the 27 barangays of the city.

Each member of the medical team is required to report to is or her barangay chairman daily.

£ £ £

In the bucket list of MCG’s medical assistance program is the establishm­ent of more hemo dialysis centers at the proposed government cener in Barangay Camachiles.

This project, however, hit a snag when a disgruntle­d lawmaker filed a cas with the Office of the Ombudsman against MCG, the vice mayor an members of the Sanggunian­g Panlungsod.

As soon as this case is resolved, it will be smooth sailing for the new city government center

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