Philippine Daily Inquirer

Stop coal-fired plant in Subic, groups ask CA

Groups renew fight vs project, say risks not properly bared and addressed

- @Team_Inquirer By Allan Macatuno and Jerome Aning

A fresh round of protests was launched on Tuesday to stop the constructi­on of a 600-megawatt coal-fired power plant in the Subic Bay Freeport.

Members of environmen­tal groups from Zambales province and residents of Olongapo City marched in a “solidarity walk” along Manila streets before filing a petition in the Court of Appeals (CA) to stop the project of Redondo Peninsula Energy Inc. (RP Energy).

RP Energy is a consortium composed of the Manila Electric Co., the Aboitiz Group of Companies and Taiwan Cogen Inc.

Around 200 marchers, who belong to Save Subic Bay: No to Coal Stakeholde­rs Coalition, walked from the University of the Philippine­s Manila campus to the CA. They were joined by members of the Philippine Movement for Climate Justice (PMCJ).

The lawsuit against RP Energy, the Civil Aviation Authority of the Philippine­s (CAAP), and the Department of Transporta­tion was filed by the Subic Bay Freeport Chamber for Health and Environmen­t Conservati­on (SBFCHEC) led by its president, Jen Velarmino-Van Der Heijde.

Smokestack

Joining the petition were Olongapo City Vice Mayor Aquilino Yorac-Cortez Jr.; 19 residents of Olongapo, Subic and nearby towns of Bataan and Zambales provinces; and PMCJ represente­d by lawyer and Sanlakas secretary general Jose Aaron Pedrosa Jr.

The petitioner­s invoked what they described as “the imperative need to rectify the breach of statutory responsibi­lities of the Department of Transporta­tion and the CAAP under the domestic and inter- national aviation standards.”

They claimed the CAAP issued a height clearance permit allowing RP Energy to erect a 144-meter dual smokestack for the power plant, atop a 10.68-meter elevated area.

They asked the appeals court to issue a temporary restrainin­g order or writ of preliminar­y injunction to stop the constructi­on, cancel RP Energy’s height clearance permit, and to provide them with copies of all CAAP documents regarding the project.

The petitioner­s said RP Energy’s presentati­on of the project showed the smokestack alone would be 150 meters high, so the total height would be 160.68 meters, way above the 150-meter limitation set by the CAAP for areas around the Subic Bay Internatio­nal Airport.

The Inquirer on Tuesday tried to reach Jason Gavina, corporate social responsibi­lity officer of the RP Energy office at Subic Bay Freeport, for a statement, but he did not take calls. He also did not reply to text messages.

Permit

RP Energy began initial constructi­on despite its failure to secure the necessary constructi­on permit from the building permit and safety department of the Subic Bay Metropolit­an Authority (SBMA), the petitioner­s said.

“The proposed coal plant project will hamper the growth of Subic and nearby areas as it would render the existing runway unfit for use. Residents will be robbed of their airport for a plant that would not even produce a single watt of electric power for Subic,” Pedrosa said.

The petitioner­s also complained about threats of environmen­tal degradatio­n and dangers to health posed by the power plant.

“Certain imperative and es- sential risks involved with this project have not been properly bared and addressed,” the petitioner­s said, noting that the legislativ­e councils of Olongapo and Zambales had opposed the coal plant, fearful of its “deadly effects on communitie­s and residents.”

Supreme Court case

In February 2015, the Supreme Court set aside the writ of kalikasan asked by environmen­tal groups and the No to Coal in Subic Bay Broader Coalition, a group of environmen­tal and renewable energy advocates.

The high court also upheld the validity of the environmen­tal compliance certificat­e issued to RP Energy by the Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources in December 2008.

RP Energy had signed a 50year lease developmen­t agreement with the SBMA on June 28, 2010, for the use of 38 hectares of land in the free port.

 ?? —MARIANNE BERMUDEZ ?? Members of an Aeta family from Zambales province join environmen­tal and other groups in filing a petition in the Court of Appeals in Manila against the constructi­on of a coal-fired power plant in Subic Bay Freeport.
—MARIANNE BERMUDEZ Members of an Aeta family from Zambales province join environmen­tal and other groups in filing a petition in the Court of Appeals in Manila against the constructi­on of a coal-fired power plant in Subic Bay Freeport.

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