The Philippine Star

‘No more blackouts’ in Mindoro town

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Residents of Paluan, Occidental Mindoro raise a banner declaring ‘No More Brownouts’ last March 11 as they celebrate the completion of the largest solar-battery micro-grid in Southeast Asia by Solar Philippine­s, which is delivering 24/7 power for the first time in the town’s history. The project also marks the launch of ‘Solar Para Sa Bayan,’ an initiative by Solar Philippine­s founder Leandro Leviste to bring cheaper and more reliable power to areas poorly served by utilities.

While millions suffer from daily power outages, Paluan town in Occidental Mindoro is now blackout-free.

Solar Philippine­s has completed the largest solar-battery micro-grid in Southeast Asia. With two megawatts of solar panels, two MW batteries and two MW diesel backup, it is designed to supply reliable power 24 hours a day at a lower cost.

The project uses panels from the Solar Philippine­s Factory and is the first microgrid in Asia to feature Powerpacks from Tesla, a leading manufactur­er of batteries and electric vehicles.

It marks the launch of “Solar Para Sa Bayan,” an initiative by Solar Philippine­s founder Leandro Leviste to bring cheaper and more reliable power to areas poorly served by utilities in support of the Duterte administra­tion’s program to end energy poverty by 2022.

At the project inaugurati­on on March 11, residents raised a banner proclaimin­g “No more brownouts” and recognized the event as a turning point for Paluan, which never had power 24/7.

Mayor Carl Pangilinan said Paluan first received four hours of daily electricit­y in 1978 from the Occidental Mindoro Electric Cooperativ­e, but it waived the franchise due to difficulti­es in serving the town.

In 2014, the National Power Corp. (Napocor) resumed service at an average of 16 hours a day, with outages that sometimes lasted for several days.

Mindoro was dubbed as the ”brownout capital of the Philippine­s” due to extended power outages.

Since Solar Philippine­s began its operations last December, Pangilinan said Palueños enjoyed their first Christmas without power interrupti­ons.

Apart from reliable power, Solar Philippine­s is serving the town at 50 percent lower cost than Napo- cor, which spends up to P20 billion a year from the Universal Charge for Missionary Electrific­ation subsidy, which is funded by consumers.

Paluan used to consume subsidies of over P30 million a year, but with Solar Philippine­s it can operate subsidy-free.

The Paluan Solar-Battery Micro-Grid was presented in August 2017 at the inaugurati­on of the Solar Philippine­s Factory, which President Duterte attended.

The President commended Solar Philippine­s for the “vision and the will” to tackle projects that do good for the country. ”All you need is the will to turn your vision into reality,” he said.

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