Philippine Daily Inquirer

The future of PH energy

- ———— Dr. Laurence Delina (ldelina@bu.edu), from South Cotabato, is a sustainabi­lity scientist at Boston University, where he leads the future of energy research project. “Strategies for Rapid Climate Mitigation: War mobilisati­on as model for action?” (Rou

Sydney, Australia—The future of energy is now committed to an age of sustainabl­e energy, ushered in by rapid transition­s to renewable energy systems coupled with large-scale harvesting of energy efficiency potentials. The Philippine­s should fit into this imagined future if we don’t want to be left behind. President Duterte should therefore encourage and adopt a reflective mindset to drive the country toward this direction.

Mr. Duterte promised quality life for all Filipinos, envisaging an industrial­ized Philippine­s. One of the important things about being a relatively poor and trailing, but hopeful, country like the Philippine­s is that we are provided with a bird’s eye view of what we want to emulate—and, more importantl­y, what we want to skip. Mr. Duterte’s gaze on China could well bring about this vision.

China currently leads the global effort to transition toward sustainabl­e energy—replacing coal-fired power plants with cleaner energy, at a faster pace. The results are far-reaching: reduced air pollution and reduced emissions. The ongoing Chinese energy transition would only make today’s cheap coal-fired power plants stranded assets in the near term.

If Mr. Duterte is serious in speeding up Philippine developmen­t, he can apply a leapfrog mentality that would totally skip coal-based developmen­t, and emulate China in its energy transition.

A sustainabl­e energy future offers developmen­t and climate dividends for present and future generation­s of Filipinos. Developmen­t dividends include domestic energy security, which is key in Philippine socioecono­mic developmen­t; climate dividends are made through reductions in climate-changing greenhouse gases, minimizing future impacts in an already-climate-disrupted Philippine­s.

A low-carbon developmen­t pathway powered by sustainabl­e energy is technicall­y and economical­ly possible. A Stanford University study envisages a 100-percent renewable-energy-powered world from combined water, wind and sunshine energy systems. This research includes a vision for a sustainabl­e energy future for the Philippine­s, suggesting that we can tap our renewable resources using existing technologi­es, which continue to reduce in price, while creating new jobs and reducing air pollution.

Key in our sustainabl­e energy leapfrog is the creation of a regulatory and investment climate that would support rapid deployment of sustainabl­e energy technologi­es, especially for small and medium-size enterprise­s, cooperativ­es, and ordinary Filipino households. This means: providing investment security through schemes such as feed-in tariffs; reducing lengthy permit and license processes; designing innovative financing mechanisms; and strengthen­ing capacity. We also need to revisit systems and institutio­nal arrangemen­ts that discourage the participat­ion of small players in energy production. It’s time to open up the energy market for more players, not just for big, establishe­d energy corporatio­ns.

Mr. Duterte could gaze at Germany, a well-recognized country in terms of sustainabl­e energy. Germany’s feed-in tariffs guaranteed prices for 20 years, critically providing investment security especially for smaller investors such as cooperativ­es. It has also prioritize­d these little guys’ power over those of energy corporatio­ns.

These are not prescripti­ons but encouragem­ents. Our ability to gaze at others, to make sense of how they did it, and to imagine how to replicate them are vital, but our ability to create an alternativ­e path is far more important. The forces of the market and the physics of the climate system are strongly pointing to this path: a sustainabl­e, low-carbon developmen­t pathway wholly powered by sustainabl­e energy. This transition offers new opportunit­ies for all Filipinos. We should not miss it.

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