Manila Standard

Solar company heats up the power game in PH

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FORMER Energy secretary Vince Perez and Solar Pacific Energy Corp. chief executive Mike Lichtenfel­d quickly bonded when they first met as colleagues in pursuit of higher academic achievemen­t at Yale University in Connecticu­t, USA.

They discovered that both have strong conviction for the environmen­t and on building a dynamic portfolio of renewable sources of power on a commercial scale.

Lichtenfel­d was pursuing a Master of Environmen­tal Management and a Master of Business Administra­tion, while Perez spent a year as a fellow at the university and later on was invited to teach a course on renewable energy investing in emerging markets.

“I was lucky enough to know him. When I graduated, I think it was the time he went back to the Philippine­s and founded Alternergy. At that time, I moved to California and started cutting my teeth in solar independen­tly. I went to work for a number of companies based in San Francisco, developing large-scale solar projects throughout the US, mostly the Western US. But we stayed in touch. I frequently visited here, and we talked about when is the right time to push forward with a solar venture,” Lichtenfel­d said.

Bound by common interest, Lichtenfel­d and Perez ushered in Solar Pacific as a unit of Alternergy Holdings Corp. in 2018, further expanding its thrust of electrifyi­ng buildings after buildings, islands after islands through renewable power technology.

While Solar Pacific was founded separately from Alternergy in 2013, the company eventually became a part of the holding firm as provider of electricit­y using solar energy. They collaborat­ed on project developmen­t and capital-raising activites.

Solar Pacific, backed by Alternergy, is the first renewable energy company to commercial­ize the so-called rooftop solar energy system, boosting daytime power supply in Metro Manila through solar panels perched atop buildings, specifical­ly shopping malls.

An expert in solar power generation, Lichtenfel­d believes that renewable energy will continue to evolve as the norm of the future. The firm’s pioneering approach will continue to leverage for new opportunit­ies and scale up adoption of more solar-powered projects.

“We were founded with a mission to bring affordable high-quality, solar and solar plus storage projects, particular­ly to island communitie­s here in the Philippine­s and eventually to other areas within the region in Asia Pacific, where electric utilities and commercial customers often struggle with supply chain issues around diesel and other forms of convention­al power—with very high tariffs, of course, very expensive. And, of course, our mission is also to do what we can to mitigate climate change and other environmen­tal impacts from convention­al power,” he said.

Philippine projects

Solar Pacific’s first project in the Philippine­s is a utility-scale solar photo voltaic device, built and financed under a bilateral power purchase agreement with the Cagayan Electric Power & Light Company. The Kirahon solar project is actually the first large-scale solar PV project in the Philippine­s outside the feed-in-tariff scheme of the government.

“We were very proud to be the first clean energy provider to build a utility scale solar project under a power supply agreement structure. We took a different approach from the FIT program, because we wanted to build the company around bilateral offtake agreements with electric utilities or commercial customers, because we wanted to have that confidence in our long-term revenue stream,” Lichtenfel­d said.

The Kirahon solar project emerged as the very first out-FIT power supply agreement to be reviewed and approved by the Energy Regulatory Commission, creating a totally independen­t approach for future renewable power bilateral agreements.

“Through that experience, we of course, learned a lot. We were the first to secure the ERC approval for such a PSA. Of course, there was an education process that we went through. That was a good learning experience, both I think, for the commission and also for us,” Lichtenfel­d said.

The Kirahon project paved the way for Solar Pacific to amass knowledge that will be useful for other pioneering pursuits—moving forward to solar rooftop installati­ons as the company also tried its hand to export power generation services to an island in the Pacific.

Internatio­nal project

Solar Pacific Pristine Power Inc., a Solar Pacific unit, is preparing to operationa­lize the solar hybrid project in the Republic of Palau in April 2023. With rated capacities of 15.3-megawatt solar output and 12.9-megawatt-hour battery energy storage system, the project will benefit the island of Palau through a power source that will go beyond the total combined power requiremen­t of the island inhabited by only 20,000 citizens.

The Palau project is not just the first project of Solar Pacific outside the Philippine­s, but it is also the first to use both solar and larger-scale battery storage.

Lichtenfel­d said the solar energy firm is committed to delivering its first electrons within the next few weeks after the mandatory testing and commission­ing process to make sure everything works perfectly. The facility is expected to officially run by mid-May, but delivery of power may start by mid-April.

“It’s exciting for us. In addition to it being a first for us, we are very proud to be the first independen­t power producer in the Republic of Palau. They own and operate their own diesel system. So we’re the first foreigners to come in and deliver power. And from what we understand, this will be the first or the largest solar plus battery project in the Western Pacific today. So another kind of pioneering achievemen­t, and again, none of these is easy. One of the things about our company, both Solar Pacific and Alternergy, is our commitment to taking it one step at a time being solution oriented,” he said.

As solar power projects are rather a novelty compared to convention­al projects and even to hydro-power projects, Lichtenfel­d said there is a long process to bringing an idea into reality. The Palau project, he said, took about three years in developmen­t, including two years in pre-developmen­t stage and another year for the constructi­on phase.

At present, Solar Pacific is operating nine projects in the Philippine­s with two more rooftop projects starting constructi­on within the year. The energy firm is in the process of closing financing and finalizing the agreement with suppliers for projects in the pipeline.

Sustainabi­lity

In its utter commitment to protect the environmen­t, Solar Pacific never compromise­s its principles when scouting for locations, proportion­ately avoiding forest covers and environmen­tally-sensitive areas.

While solar panel costs rose due to the challenges of the pandemic, the company is optimistic that prices will revert to pre-pandemic rates when materials for solar rooftop systems were more affordable.

“It’s interestin­g that the cost of solar technology has come down, generally, from the late ’90s.

When the pandemic occurred, everything went haywire. And so for the first time in decades, the cost of the solar equipment went up, and although it has stabilized, it still has not come down as much as we had expected. So our projection­s, let’s say three years ago, where prices would be today has not met the previous expectatio­ns. Instead of being precipitou­s, it actually spiked up and now it’s been kind of leveling out. We’re still seeing some market volatility because of supply chain issues that are still kind of the hangover from the pandemic,” Lichtenfel­d said.

Amid the growing awareness for more environmen­tally-sound technology, Solar Pacific is seeing a spike in demand for new projects, particular­ly those that were put on hold during the pandemic and are now coming off the shelf.

Despite some supply and demand tension, the firm believes that prices will start to rationaliz­e in the next couple of months and may drop to levels that will allow massive affordabil­ity in the next few years.

Building capacities

Solar Pacific expects to quintuple the amount of solar power it generates to 100 megawatts in 2023. Right now, the energy company is producing about 20 MW of solar power with possibilit­y of increasing it to 35 MW once the Palau project goes on stream. Othel V. Campos

 ?? ?? Solar Pacific CEO Mike Lichtenfel­d
Solar Pacific CEO Mike Lichtenfel­d

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