The Philippine Star

Solar Phl shifting focus to rural dev’t

- – Danessa Rivera

From serving shopping malls and residents of urban areas like Metro Manila, Solar Philippine­s is now shifting its focus to rural developmen­t in line with its mission to provide cheap and reliable electricit­y to every Filipino.

Solar Philippine­s founder and president Leandro Leviste said the company would devote over 50 percent of its resources to areas unserved or poorly served by electric utilities.

“Inspired by President Duterte’s mission to improve the lives of Filipinos, we will do our utmost to end energy poverty in the Philippine­s by 2022,” he said.

“We’ve received thousands of emails from Filipinos asking for solar with batteries in provinces with expensive electricit­y and regular brownouts. While traditiona­l businesses prefer to focus on larger markets like Metro Manila, we are hopeful that investing in rural areas will help uplift Filipinos from poverty, and eventually create an even larger market among the new middle class,” Leviste said.

During its recent factory inaugurati­on, Solar Philippine­s unveiled to President Duterte the company’s first social impact project in Paluan, Occidental Mindoro, a town so remote it had been deemed unviable by even the electric coop.

The company is now constructi­ng a four megawatt (MW) solar-battery farm, which will become the world’s largest island solar-battery microgrid, and bring 24/7 power to up to 20,000 Filipinos – at zero cost to the government, and at lower cost to consumers.

It hopes this will be a model for every town in the Philippine­s to host its own solar-battery micro-grid, and save P20 billion a year in diesel subsidies.

Solar Philippine­s is in discussion­s with various communitie­s to bring this model nationwide, and integrate irrigation and other initiative­s to create employment in rural areas.

Earlier, Leviste said the company is actively participat­ing in various bids for on-grid and off-grid power developmen­ts in the region.

The firm hopes to build around 200 MW of solar farms in Indonesia, Myanmar and other parts of Southeast Asia in 2018.

If it secures contracts to build solar farms outside the country, the solar panels will be served by its solar factory in Sto. Tomas, Batangas.

At 800-MW annual production capacity starting this year, the solar panel factory can produce solar panels more than the production capacity of the entire US.

The company plans to raise the factory’s annual capacity to 2,000 MW by mid-2018 to produce solar panels and solar cells to meet the requiremen­ts of its solar projects, of local distributo­rs and exports to Chinese companies seeking to manufactur­e solar panels from Southeast Asia for export to the US and Europe, where government­s imposed tariffs on solar panels made in China.

“We measure our success not based on profit, but our contributi­on to our nation’s developmen­t. We aspire not to be the biggest company, but the one that makes the biggest impact for Filipinos, and hope the entire power industry can unite to support President Duterte’s vision for cheaper, reliable electricit­y to make the Philippine­s a first-world nation,” Leviste said.

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