Philippine Daily Inquirer

LESS RELIANCE ON COAL IN POWER SECTOR SEEN

- By Ronnel W. Domingo @RonWDoming­oINQ

CEBU CITY— The electricit­y industry is approachin­g the threshold of transition into the dominance of renewable energy resources, under which there is “not much need for many new plants” especially coal-fired ones, according to the top official of First Philippine Holdings Corp.

“There are many powerful vectors” converging to change the energy industry and provide an opportunit­y to leapfrog and build a power industry “that’s truly for the 21st century,” said Federico R. Lopez, FPHC chair and chief executive.

Lopez was speaking at the 2nd Philippine Environmen­t Summit held here and which wrapped up on Thursday.

FPHC’s subsidiari­es and affiliates operate various electricit­y-generation facilities, including major assets that run on natural gas ( belonging to First Gen Corp.) and geothermal power (Energy Developmen­t Corp.).

Lopez said energy companies in the Philippine­s face an intense price competitio­n, with coal-fired power plants continuing to capture a sizeable portion of the market.

“Yet another challenge is the short-term perspectiv­e of a government ambivalent about climate change issues,” he said. “Despite our countrymen’s vulnerabil­ity to the effects of global warming, only token importance is given to such concerns in national public policy.”

Lopez said the increase in the excise tax on coal, under the Tax Reform for Accelerati­on and Inclusion (Train) law, “was a step in the right direction but will only amount to as little as one to three centavos per kwh in tariffs to coal-fired power plants.”

Even then, Lopez said the advancemen­t of clean energy technology was going very fast such that solar, wind and battery storage have experience­d significan­t cost reductions over the last few years.

“Coal-fired power plants can’t keep up with that kind of variabilit­y (in terms of supply from and availabili­ty of renewable energy) and may likely end up as underutili­zed or stranded assets in 10 years or less given the rapid pace of renewables,” he said.

“Coal is no longer cheap. It doesn’t have the flexibilit­y needed for the inevitable penetratio­n of renewable energy sources into our lives,” he added.

He said that even advanced coal plants have carbon emissions and pollutants double or triple that of the standard combine cycle gas turbines.

“Natural gas-fired power plants, on the other hand, are seen as indispensa­ble technology for keeping the lights on in the transition to the all-renewable future we’re heading towards,” Lopez said.

According to Moody’s In- vestors Service, policy support from government­s are needed to encourage investment in carbon capture and storage (CCS), considerin­g that the use of coal was expected to remain strong globally to drive growing economies.

Moody’s said in a report that clean coal technologi­es were particular­ly essential to ensuring environmen­tal sustainabi­lity in Asia, where developing economies are poised to drive steady growth in global coal consumptio­n for the next two decades.

“CCS investment has not received the necessary backing in part because the United States, Europe and China are shifting the fuel mix away from coal and toward cost-competitiv­e, often subsidized, alternativ­e fuels,” Moody’s vice president Anna Zubets-Anderson said in a statement.

The Global CCS Institute, which is based in Australia, explained that

the CCS technology involved capturing carbon dioxide produced by large industrial facilities—such as power plants—compressin­g it for transporta­tion and then injecting it deep into a rock formation at a carefully selected and safe site, where it is permanentl­y stored.

Zubets-Anderson added that, however, due to the lack of opportunit­ies to use captured carbon dioxide in the oil fields, CCS developmen­t has not gained momentum in Asia.

 ??  ?? Energy Developmen­t Corp.’s 156.82-MW Burgos Wind and Solar Farm
Energy Developmen­t Corp.’s 156.82-MW Burgos Wind and Solar Farm

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