Philippine Daily Inquirer

MAJOR NGCP PROJECTS WORTH P56B UNDERWAY

- By Ronnel W. Domingo @RonWDoming­oINQ

The National Grid Corp. of the Philippine­s has set the ball rolling for two major projects with a combined worth of about P56 billion, including a subsea link that will unify the Philippine power transmissi­on network.

NGCP said it broke ground on Friday for the $1.2-billion Mindanao-Visayas interconne­ction project (MVIP), particular­ly the facility’s cable terminal stations in Santander, Cebu, and in Dapitan, Zamboanga del Norte.

The MVIP, which is scheduled to be online in 2020, will enable the transmissi­on of electricit­y between the country’s three main island groups.

The Energy Regulatory Commission in 2017 gave the go-signal for the NGCP to start the MVIP with an indicative cost of P51.7 billion, which may change as the project unravels and through further perusal of regulators.

This was a long-delayed follow-up to the linkup of the Luzon and Visayas grids, which was accomplish­ed 20 years ago in 1998.

Once completed, the MVIP will allow the transmissi­on of up to 450 megawatts at a time.

Also, NGCP has geared up to reinforce its power transmissi­on services in Aklan—currently being serviced by a single 69-kilovolt transmissi­on line—with the constructi­on of its Nabas-Caticlan-Boracay 138kv transmissi­on line project.

The new line—which the ERC approved at a cost P4.27 billion—will traverse through the town of Nabas and Malay, and is expected to be completed by March 2021.

Citing an outlook from Aklan Electric Cooperativ­e, the grid operator said Boracay Island was projected to see continuous growth in power consumptio­n and so an additional transmissi­on line must be built to secure the stability and continuous supply.

The project involves the constructi­on of a new 138-kv submarine cable between Caticlan and Boracay, an undergroun­d 69-kv line to Manocmanoc, and another 138-kv transmissi­on line from Caticlan to Nabas.

Also, NGCP said it would simultaneo­usly upgrade its Nabas and Boracay substation­s to accommodat­e the increase in power capacity.

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