Manila Bulletin

DOE rejects moratorium on coal plants’ developmen­t

- By MYRNA M. VELASCO

For once, the Department of Energy (DOE) has categorica­lly stated that it will not impose moratorium on coal plant developmen­ts because these are still needed to meet the country’s growing energy demand.

Instead, the department is working on policies and measures that shall set stricter standards on coal-fired power plants, including storage and handling of coal fuel.

In a very emotional statement aimed at the recent pronouncem­ent of former United States vice president Al Gore when he was in Manila, Energy Secretary Zenaida Y. Monsada has stated firmly that “we cannot stop coal plants” – at least she emphasized that “not at this time.”

She stressed that the department cannot just let the Filipino people grope in the dark or blackouts by drasticall­y imposing policies that would stall power plants’ constructi­on leaning on coal technologi­es.

“They’re saying: Why are you still allowing coal plants? But what we’re saying is: we still need power.

We can’t prevent them at this point. We have to take note also that five years ago, these were already planned and they have already been under constructi­on,” the energy chief stressed.

Monsada noted that even if all power generation facilities in the Philippine­s will be equipped with coal technology, there would still be no assurance that natural disasters will not strike.

“We have already submitted contributi­on for climate change. In fact, the Philippine­s is very ambitious that it will be 70-percent emissions reduction – and we have a target date which is 2030, and it is not today, that’s what was discussed at COP21 (21st Conference of the Parties),” she said.

Monsada added that if controls and stricter standards will be enforced, it will be for the greenfield power developmen­ts in the future.

Under the proposed fuel mix rebalancin­g thought out by the department, she emphasized that future electricit­y supply will no longer be addressed by coal, but by other cleaner sources such as renewables; and gas as “bridging fuel.”

“We have aspiration for 30- 30- 30 fuel mix. We aspire for balanced energy mix because we cannot be overly dependent on a single source especially if that resource is not locally produced,” Monsada said.

She indicated that the country’s emissions reduction pledge under the COP 21 climate change diplomacy is not just power – but had also factored in the emissions contributi­on of other sectors, such as transporta­tion and agricultur­e, among others.

 ??  ?? ZENAIDA Y. MONSADA
ZENAIDA Y. MONSADA

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