Manila Bulletin

Meralco deploying 150 generator sets for May 13 polls

- By MYRNA M. VELASCO

While the drizzly weather takes a lot of heat off from tight supply conditions, power utility giant Manila Electric Company (Meralco) is not taking chances, hence it will be deploying more than 150 generator sets (gensets) to ensure uninterrup­ted power supply during the May 13 election and the subsequent canvassing period.

“These generator sets intend to provide basic lighting to polling and canvassing places in case of unexpected power interrupti­ons,” the utility firm said.

It added that “around 300 floodlight­s will also be ready for deployment and use in case of emergencie­s,” although it still advised polling centers to bring “back-up lights” and they must also need to keep pace with precaution­ary measures.

Part of the caution set out by Meralco is directed on those who will be manning the voting precincts and canvassing centers, purportedl­y “to avoid plugging in unnecessar­y appliances to avoid overloadin­g and octopus wiring.”

It further advised the public “to refrain from using balloons, firecracke­rs, confetti and party poppers near overhead lines and facilities to avoid tripping and power interrupti­ons.”

In a related developmen­t, the Department of Energy (DOE) is likewise intensifyi­ng its coordinati­on with stakeholde­rs to ensure sufficient and reliable power supply on this year’s mid-term elections.

Via the Energy Task Force Election that the department is spearheadi­ng, it has stepped up collaborat­ive efforts primarily with the Commission on Elections (Comelec) and then with key stakeholde­rs in the industry, such as the National Grid Corporatio­n of the Philippine­s; the generation companies and the distributi­on utilities like Meralco and the electric cooperativ­es.

Energy Secretary Alfonso G. Cusi declared that “our main goal is to ensure that there will be adequate and uninterrup­ted supply of energy during the election period.”

Power grids, primarily Luzon, had turned jittery in weeks leading to the election season because of the series of yellow and red alerts that had plagued the system following the simultaneo­us outages of power plants.

Those scenarios raised fears of possible adverse impact that probable rotating brownouts may spark off on the election results, hence, the DOE had been taken to task by other relevant government agencies – including the two houses of Congress – so it can guarantee power supply sufficienc­y in this very critical political exercise in the country.

Cusi qualified “Filipino voters deserve clean and unquestion­able elections with the stable provision of energy during the voting until the full transmissi­on of results.”

The energy department thus emphasized “the importance of close coordinati­on” not just with the power industry players but also with law enforcemen­t agencies and security groups of the country – chiefly with the National Security Council, Armed Forces of the Philippine­s, Philippine National Police, Bureau of Fire Protection and the Philippine Coast Guard.

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