Philippine Daily Inquirer

Newprobe ordered on fuel plant over stench in Isabela village

EMB says 2016 stoppage order issued to bioethanol processing firm yet to be lifted

- —VILLAMORVI­SAYA JR.

SAN MARIANO, ISABELA— A bioethanol processing plant covered by a 2016 cease-anddesist order from the Environmen­tal Management Bureau (EMB) has again been directed to stop processing sugarcane and its derivative­s after communitie­s reported bad smell coming from its premises.

In a meeting on Feb. 23, Nelson Honrado, EMB director in Isabela province, reminded Green Future Innovation­s Inc. (GFII) that its processing plant at Barangay Mallabo here must not be reactivate­d since the stop order had not been lifted.

Permit revoked

The plant’s environmen­tal permit to operate had been revoked by the EMB and the Pollution Adjudicati­on Board for failing emission and effluent standards two years ago.

Environmen­t Secretary Roy Cimatu ordered a new investigat­ion after Malacañang received complaints about a noxious stench that had affected residents.

Romy Ecraela, GFII pollution control officer, told Honra- do that the plant would abide by environmen­t rules. He also said the plant had undertaken safety measures but he did not elaborate.

Residents vented their ire online.

The stench was unbearable during the early hours of the morning, according to a post by Philip Julian Moris, while a Mallabo resident, Vherilyn Aggari, said her son had suffered asthma attacks due to the effluents and from smoke billowing from the plant.

The EMB environmen­tal permit for processing and the distributi­on of ethanol and for energy distributi­on allowed GFII to release effluents into waterways provided that their content and quality “shall not exceed standard limits.”

Power generation

Developed in 2013 as a large-scale bioethanol and cogenerati­on plant in this town, GFII is now managed by the Central Azucarera de Tarlac in a tie-up with Filipino, Japanese and Taiwanese investors.

The plant produces up to 200,000 liters a day, or 54 million liters of anhydrous alcohol annually, according to the GFII website. Its cogenerati­on plant, which converts excess bagasse to energy, generates 19 megawatts of renewable power.

 ?? —JUN BANDAYREL ?? Sugarcane is turned into bioethanol at a plant in San Mariano town, Isabela province. Residents, however, are opposing the processing plant’s operation due to concerns about pollution.
—JUN BANDAYREL Sugarcane is turned into bioethanol at a plant in San Mariano town, Isabela province. Residents, however, are opposing the processing plant’s operation due to concerns about pollution.
 ?? —JUN BANDAYREL ?? Workers trim sugarcane stalks at a plantation in Murcia, Negros Occidental.
—JUN BANDAYREL Workers trim sugarcane stalks at a plantation in Murcia, Negros Occidental.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines