
MANILA (Mindanao Examiner / Mar. 19, 2014) – The Department of Energy said it has provided immediate and long-term solutions to address the power shortage in the southern Philippines.
It said it has laid down ground works for Mindanao given that the region has been experiencing power shortage of about 200-400 megawatts or an average of 4-hour rotating brownouts affecting businesses, but the power shortage is as much as 10 hours in a day in some areas.
And the problems on power shortage has been going on for years and citizens were asking Manila to provide solutions to these predicaments which is affecting the region’s economy and citizens as well.
The DOE blamed the outages to the increasing supply-demand gap brought about by the lack of entry of new power projects, and the derating and non-operation of power plants in the region in the prior years.
In the short-term, the DOE in partnership with the energy stakeholders, said it has added 128 MW in capacities through the introduction of new power capacities which includes the 15 MW EEI Diesel Peaking Power Plant and 15 MW Mapalad Diesel Power Plant last year, and re-commissioning of the 98 MW Iligan Diesel Power Plant also in 2013.
The DOE said it also pushed for the rehabilitation and uprating of the Agus 6 Power Plant Units 1 and 2 from 50MW to 69MW as well as the infrastructure development along Balo-I plains in coordination with Department of Public Works and Highways to maximize the capacities of Agus 1 and 2.
Alongside these measures, the DOE also initiated several programs and measures to provide the power of choice and draw in all available resources for the benefit of the region: the Interim Mindanao Electricity Market, Interruptible Load Program and the Modular Gensets Program.
“These programs are on a voluntary basis and serve as options for electric power providers and consumers to manage their power requirements with the corresponding costs,” Energy Secretary Carlos Jericho Petilla said.
He said for the long-term, the DOE has facilitated the entry of new power investments such as the 300 MW Coal-Fired Therma South Energy Project located in Davao del Sur and the 200 MW Southern Mindanao Coal-Fired in Sarangani that will add another 500 MW by 2015.
Meanwhile, the 405 MW Coal-Fired Power Plant of FDC Utilities Inc. in Misamis Oriental will come online by September 2016.
“It takes 2-4 years to build a new power plant. We in the energy sector realize that the problems that we face now require long-term solutions,” Petilla said, adding that facilitating investors’ interest to bring in new capacities to meet the increasing demand is a priority not only in Mindanao but across the country.
In addition, he said, the DOE, in collaboration with the National Grid Corp. of the Philippines, is also looking into the completion of the Leyte-Mindanao Interconnection Project by 2018. Once completed, it will enable to share capacities with the Luzon and Visayas Grids, especially during supply shortfall.
Petilla said the DOE recently issued the Department Circular 2014-03-0006 which directs the operation of all existing generation companies in Mindanao to operate and offer their power to the grid to increase supply capacity.
All these measures and projects, he said, are envisioned to provide the best possible solutions to address the Mindanao power situation.