Manila Bulletin

Gov’t set to require technology upgrade

For coal-fired power projects

- By MYRNA M. VELASCO

To pare carbon emissions, President Rodrigo Duterte declared that the government will be requiring an upgrade in coal-fired plant technology deployment­s, primarily for ongoing greenfield power projects and even for those that are still on blueprint.

He said the country will continue to embrace coal technology as an energy option to underpin the aspired economic growth of this administra­tion, but it must be done with what he calls a “happy balance” achieved through utilizatio­n of clean coal technologi­es (CCT or clean tech) in power generating facilities.

“We’ll have no other alternativ­e except to upgrade the technology to its fullest,” the President said, while emphasizin­g that coal will stay, “for as long as it is the most viable fuel” that could give cheaper rates to the Filipino consumers.

Duterte added “we are now trying to figure out how to balance it. We would like to have a clean planet but that would be nigh impossible really to insist because civilizati­on needs to have light. So you strike a happy balance.”

He further stressed “at this time, whoever is the President of the Philippine­s would always contend with coal,” adding that such resource is still of massive scale and could still fuel the country and the world for decades and even centuries.

The Chief Executive averred that while there are lots of flashiness about going “green” on energy options, for an economical­ly emerging country like the Philippine­s, it cannot just really thrive as an alternativ­e.

“There have been a lot of inventions about solar and everything. But other people and especially the pretentiou­s experts, they do not have a good alternativ­e, I mean cheap, affordable fuel for the power plants,” Duterte noted.

On reference, global think-tank Internatio­nal Energy Agency (IEA) in its latest report has noted that many power markets, mainly in Asia, would still be “highly dependent on coal” in meeting their energy needs.

The IEA emphasized that geographic­al shift in increased coal consumptio­n is definitely coming to Asia; and that “this shift will accelerate in the next years.”

It explained that coal would still be the preferred fuel for emerging economies “because it is relatively affordable and widely available.” It is a primary fuel for electricit­y generation, steel production and cement manufactur­ing, among others.

According to Keisuke Sadamori, IEA director for energy markets and security, “coal demand is moving to Asia, where emerging economies with growing population­s are seeking affordable and secure energy sources to power their economies.”

Yet given the environmen­tal issues thrown against

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