Philippine Daily Inquirer

Power crisis: No time for ‘Noynoying’

- By Amando Doronila

IN THE MIDST of the acute power shortage in Mindanao, mounting criticism of his lethargic leadership style and the parlous performanc­e of the economy, President Aquino reappeared in public last week from his spells of invisibili­ty during crisis to announce that he was in charge.

The power shortage confronted the administra­tion with

its most severe economic challenge since it took office 20 months ago.

With Mindanao being increasing­ly paralyzed by eighthour daily electricit­y outages, the President was forced to call a summit in April of affected sectors on the worsening crisis in Mindanao, home to 25 million Filipinos, following a dialogue in Malacañang a week ago between Mr. Aquino and Lualhati Antonino, chair of the Mindanao Developmen­t Authority (MINDA).

The meeting sought to draw up immediate measures to address the shortage that left Mr. Aquino with little time to temporize.

The crisis that threatens to blow up into an economic emergency on the scale that paralyzed industrial capacity in Lu- zon at the end of the administra­tion of his mother, President Cory Aquino, in 1992 did not come out of the blue.

The administra­tion of President Fidel Ramos felt the full brunt of the power shortage he inherited from Cory Aquino, who did very little to prepare for its onslaught.

When the shortage became more severe, members of Congress and Mindanao residents warned the administra­tion that the daily power outages would throw the country into a Dark Age similar to that experience­d in the waning years of the Cory Aquino presidency—a legacy Mr. Aquino would be loathe to live with, for which it is unfair to hold him fully responsibl­e.

More warnings

The Philippine Chamber of Commerce and Industries (PCCI) said it had been warning about a looming power crisis in Mindanao since 2008, “and as late as 2011,” well into Mr. Aquino’s first two years.

Some Mindanao congressme­n said they had called the administra­tion’s attention to the recurrent electricit­y blackouts as early as 2010, so the President couldn’t say he had not been warned and had not anticipate­d the crisis.

Power output in Mindanao has been curtailed by dwindling energy production of aging hydroelect­ric plants and the failure to tap alternativ­e sources of power.

Mr. Aquino admitted on March 25 that the government had neglected to address the Mindanao power shortage and asked the people to be pa- tient—an approach that offered no concrete measures to increase the supply of electricit­y.

He said it would take time before measures could be put in place, noting that the P2.6-billion rehabilita­tion of the Agus VI hydroelect­ric power plant would take up to 30 months.

The plant was built in 1953 and was good for only 30 years, until 1983. Past presidents, including Cory Aquino, never addressed the problem. This is one way of saying, Mr. Aquino is not to blame for the crisis.

Tough luck for him. The problem flared up during his watch, but the emergency demands immediate short-term measures to halt the worsening short supply of power—not excuses or looking for scapegoats.

Impact on peace talks

Energy Secretary Jose Rene Almendras said the power shortage would last until 2013.

MINDA officials on Thursday urged the administra­tion to lay down a comprehens­ive road map aimed at solving the power crisis.

It warned that the failure to formulate a cohesive national policy to combat the shortage of electricit­y would have adverse effects on the island’s economic progress and, ultimately, determine the success or failure of peace talks with separatist rebels.

There are demands to sack Almendras, but that would be scapegoati­ng. It would not generate power supply for Mindanao.

His removal would only deprive the President of a fall guy who would deflect flak from falling on him. This is the reason why it would not serve the President to fire Almendras.

In its statement calling for the drafting of a blueprint of concrete response to the power shortage, the PCCI emphasized that, “as strategica­lly and correctly planned years before, lower power cost was the key driver in making businesses locate and thrive in Mindanao and would be a strong platform in achieving peace in the area.”

The issue of granting Mr. Aquino emergency powers to deal with the shortages has come up. Although the President is not keen on emergency powers, Ramos said there might be a need for special powers if reports in the media about the Mindanao crisis were true.

Ramos said he was given emergency powers by Congress to solve the eight to 12-hour brownouts in Metro Manila in 1992. Thanks to the electricit­y power law that was passed in his favor, he said, he was able to solve the crisis in 1993.

No luxury of time

The PCCI has also called on the government to come up with integrated short- and longterm strategies to address the problem, ensure the growth potential and continued operation of enterprise­s and industries on the island, and avert serious unemployme­nt.

The Mindanao electricit­y emergency underlined the high profile of economic issues that have been sidelined by the Aquino administra­tion and that are now calling attention to the high costs of economic neglect.

As he turned his attention to the crippling Mindanao crisis, the President was also forced to tackle government’s underspend­ing on infrastruc­ture.

On Tuesday, he told the Philippine Investment Forum that the government had ordered the accelerati­on of eight big ticket infrastruc­ture projects under his public-private partnershi­p (PPP) program to bolster economic growth that had bogged down to 3.7 percent last year from 7 percent the year before.

Critics have accused him of lacking urgency on the economic front, blaming the GDP plunge to the cut in government spending when pump-priming was needed.

For the first time, the Aquino administra­tion faces a call to action to roll back the power shortage in Mindanao. He has no time to sit on it.

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