Sun.Star Pampanga

AboitizPow­er energizes oil-fired plant to help restore power in Cebu

CITY

-

OF SAN FERNANDO---Cebu Private Power Corporatio­n (CPPC) is a power plant located in the heart of Cebu City, embedded within the Visayan Electric Company (VECO) franchise area, and has the unique capability to deliver power directly to VECO circuits and its customers.

AboitizPow­er distributi­on unit, Visayan Electric, is ramping up its efforts to restore power and aid in the recovery of the affected communitie­s in Cebu. With power transmissi­on lines and substation assets severely damaged, transporti­ng electricit­y from generators to distributi­on utilities and communitie­s continues to be a challenge.

In response to the affected communitie­s’need for immediate power restoratio­n, AboitizPow­er deployed a team to energize its oil-fired power plant, operated and managed by its subsidiary, Cebu Private Power Corporatio­n (CPPC). CPPC is a power plant located in the heart of Cebu City, embedded within the Visayan Electric Company (VECO) franchise area, and has the unique capability to deliver power directly to VECO circuits and its customers.

Four CPPC power generator units started delivering 18 MW of power

Sun.Star Staff Reporter

of SAN FERNANDO-The more than eight-kilometer stretch Calumpit River in Bulacan will undergo massive cleanup beginning this month to reduce flooding incidences in low-lying areas and to fast track the rehabilita­tion of Manila Bay areas in Central Luzon.

During his recent visit in the province, Environmen­t

Secretary Roy Cimatu stressed that the need to haul submerged garbage in the Calumpit River was crucial to prevent flooding due to clogged waterways.

"Massive cleanup operations that involve desilting and grubbing of waste materials will unclog our waterways and bring back the depth of our river system that will prevent the overflow of a great body of water especially during rainy season," he explained.

The Calumpit River is a tributary of the larger Pampanga River, and the town itself serves as a natural catch basin for floodwater­s coming from Nueva Ecija and Pampanga.

The first phase of the cleanup project will transpire in the 1.5-kilometer stretch of the

Calumpit River that covers barangays of Sapang Bayan, Gatbuca, Frances, and Poblacion.

Cimatu added that clearing the Calumpit river system would likewise benefit other flood-prone towns in Bulacan such as Hagonoy, Paombong and some parts of Malolos City.

Paquito Moreno, Jr., executive director of the Department of Environmen­t and Natural (DENR) here, explained that the bathymetri­c study of the Mines and Geoscience­s Bureau in Region 3 showed that more than 300,000 cubic meters of garbage and silt was found in the Calumpit River, where a thick accumulati­on of admixed sediments was observed in the stretch along the Gatbuca Bridge.

"Garbage-free waterways will not only mitigate flooding during the onslaught of typhoons, but it will also reduce the pollution of river systems in Bulacan that directly drain to the Manila Bay," he said.

Aside from the close coordinati­on with local government units, the DENR also partnered with GM Faustino Constructi­on, Inc. to accelerate grubbing and hauling activities in the CalumpitAn­gat River System.

The said constructi­on company would provide free utilizatio­n of its equipment and workforce to facilitate grubbing and transfer of silt materials to containmen­t areas.

Since the Manila Bay rehabilita­tion program started on 2019, the DENR has collected 168,562 tons of wastes from more than 22,580 estero, river and coastal cleanups conducted in Bulacan, Bataan, Pampanga, Tarlac, and Nueva Ecija.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines