The Freeman

Proposed LNG power plant inLapu-LapuCityca­ncelled

- — Caecent No-ot Magsumbol/FPL

The company behind the proposed liquefied natural gas (LNG) power plant in Lapu-Lapu City has canceled its applicatio­n for Environmen­tal Compliance Certificat­e (ECC) following strong opposition from the public.

The central office of the Department of Environmen­t and Natural ResourceEn­vironmenta­l Management Bureau (DENR-EMB) published on Friday a notice declaring that Converge Power Generation Corp. (CPGC), a subsidiary of SMC Global Power Holdings Corporatio­n (SMC GPHC), has requested to cancel its applicatio­n for the issuance of an ECC for the proposed 600 MW LNG Combined Cycle Power Plant in Lapu-Lapu City.

The cancellati­on of its ECC applicatio­n also paved the way for the cancellati­on of the supposed public scoping today. Such is one of the early stages of the ECC applicatio­n.

The project proponent first scheduled a public scoping on May 25, 2022 at a covered court of a private school in Barangay Poblacion but was canceled after several stakeholde­rs such as the church, school, and community representa­tives from areas directly or indirectly affected by the project questioned the proponent’s failure to comply with the minimum requiremen­ts prior to conducting public scoping.

The affected stakeholde­rs, supported by lawyers from the Philippine Movement for Climate Justice (PMCJ), cited DENR Administra­tive Order (DAO) 2017-15 which requires the conduct of informatio­n and education campaign (IEC) among stakeholde­rs prior to scoping.

Those who are opposed to the project were relieved to know about the cancellati­on of the proposed fossil gas power plant in Barangays Poblacion and Looc, Lapu-Lapu City, but remain vigilant over possible fossil gas expansion in Cebu.

"Dako ang among kalipay nga gibakwi ang aplikasyon sa SMC para magtukod og LNG power plant dinhi sa Mactan Island. Makabalaka ang sugyot nga proyekto kay gawas nga modugang kini sa kadaot sa kinaiyahan, mo-guba pa kini sa among tinubdan sa panginabuh­ian ug pagkaon, ang kadagatan. Ang ibuga og balik nga init nga tubig-dagat ug ubang kemikal ngadto sa Mactan Channel mopatay sa mga pagkaong dagat sa hunasan ngadto sa lawod," according to Crispin Caya, chairperso­n of HUGAMA-PANGISDA, a fisherfolk­s group in Lapu-Lapu City affiliated with KILUSAN Cebu, also a member of the antiLNG alliance.

The community's interest to engage in the project heightened upon learning that a dirty power plant, and not a mall they were made to believe, shall be establishe­d a few meters away from their homes, schools, market, the Nuestra Señora De Regla - Parish National Shrine, offices, and commercial establishm­ents, according to Lito Vasquez of the Asian People's Movement on Debt and Developmen­t (APMDD) and one of the convenors of the local anti-fossil gas alliance.

“It is hard to imagine how an environmen­tally critical project that emits harmful methane, carbon dioxide, and other toxic substances, could co-exist with the community,” he said.

The Philippine Movement for Climate Justice in the Visayas also welcomes such developmen­t.

“The cancellati­on of the Converge/SMC Global Power's ECC applicatio­n is a welcome developmen­t in our fight for national survival", adding that "the use of liquefied natural gas (LNG), a fossil fuel, to generate additional energy capacity runs counter to calls for drastic reduction of greenhouse gasses, which is responsibl­e for the global warming we are experienci­ng today.,” said PMCJ’s coordinato­r Estela Vasquez.

Teody Navea of Sanlakas Cebu and convenor of PMCJ Cebu, added that "now is the time to realize a just transition to renewable energy.”

“The suffering of communitie­s in the cities of Naga and Toledo affected by the operations of coal power plants are testaments that the use of fossil fuels must end. The operation of new LNG power plants anywhere in Cebu or the rest of the country shall bring us closer to catastroph­ic climate change,” said Nivea.

LNG is natural gas cooled into liquid form for ease of transporta­tion and shall be sourced abroad as the Malampaya gas run dry by 2027.

The anti-fossil alliance, in the meantime, continues its educationa­l activities to inform communitie­s about the harmful effects of fossil fuels.

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