The Philippine Star

DOE readies submission of energy transition plan

- – Danessa Rivera

The incoming administra­tion will have to push harder to develop indigenous and clean power sources to strengthen the country’s resiliency amid global energy issues as the Department of Energy (DOE) prepares a comprehens­ive report for the transition.

DOE Undersecre­tary Felix William Fuentebell­a said the agency is coming up with a comprehens­ive report and proposals to be turned over to the next administra­tion.

He said the agency’s energy policy and planning bureau has been collating inputs from other bureaus and services since February.

“It has not been finalized how we propose it, but the keyword being used is the energy transition. We are undergoing energy transition already, we have a big push for technology, not only nuclear but also renewable technologi­es,” Fuentebell­a said.

The current administra­tion has faced reliabilit­y concerns in the energy sector.

Most recent is the impact of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, which has caused energy and food price shocks across the globe.

To mitigate the impact of outside factors, the incoming government would need focus on developing indigenous and clean energy sources, Fuentebell­a said.

“There are pressing issues that we have to attend to including strengthen­ing the resiliency of the country as far as the developmen­t of our indigenous and clean sources are concerned,” he said.

Under the Philippine Energy Plan (PEP) 2020-2040, the DOE has set a target to increase the RE share in the power generation mix to 35 percent and 50 percent by 2030 and 2040, respective­ly.

As of end-2020, RE cornered only 21 percent of the country’s total power generation mix while coal dominated the mix with 57.2 percent.

Non-government institutio­ns earlier said the next administra­tion must prioritize shifting the country to clean and renewable energy to have a bigger impact on climate change and to secure an inclusive and resilient economy.

This follows the third part of the Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change’s (IPCC) Sixth Assessment Report (AR6) released last month, which stated that shifting to renewable energy is among the top solutions to at least halving global greenhouse gas emissions by 2030 in line with the Paris Agreement warming limit and to achieve an inclusive, resilient, and sustainabl­e economic recovery.

Institute for Climate and Sustainabl­e Cities (ICSC) associate for policy advocacy Denise Fontanilla said the latest installmen­t of the IPCC report reinforces the challenge to the next administra­tion to reframe climate resilience as economic resilience.

“This new report confirms what our own experts have been calling for. Adaptation must remain the country’s climate response anchor, because the pursuit of resilience objectives will establish if not accelerate the country’s decarboniz­ation agenda,” she said.

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