DAVAO CITY, Oct 1 (PIA) An officer of the Association of Mindanao
Rural Electric Cooperatives (AMRECO) questioned the move of the
Department of Energy seeking emergency powers for the president due to
the looming power shortage in Luzon.
Sergio Dagooc,
president of the AMRECO said the power crisis has been experienced in
Mindanao for the past five years and no recommendation to that effect
has been sought to ease the island’s power situation.
He said he could hardly get satisfactory answer to this question.
“Are you telling us that the Filipinos in Mindanao are second-class citizens?” Dagooc stressed.
He
said a Mindanao-based solon also raised this issue with the Department
of Energy on several public hearings in the committee on energy in the
lower but also got no answer from the agency concerned.
Dagooc stressed that the DOE is the agency mandated to ensure energy reliability not only for Luzon but also nationwide.
He said he is already satisfied that the AMRECO has made its stand about the power situation in Mindanao.
Dagooc
assured that their organization supports the government’s effort to
come up with a balance power energy source in Mindanao citing 50 percent
dependence on renewable energy source and 50 percent on fossil fuel.
“We
do not want to experience the predicament in Luzon where electric rates
are dependent in the prizes of coal, bunker and diesel” he said.
Dagooc
said compared to other renewable energy sources, mini-hydro power
plants can generate more capacity and consequently lower rates.
Romeo
Montenegro, communications director of the Mindanao Development
Authority (MINDA) said that they are closely working with the AMRECO for
the Mindanao Congress for the Advocates of Renewable Energy Advocacy
and Rural Electrification Development.
He projected
that there will be a more sustainable power source in Mindanao in 2015
with the operation of more coal-fired power plants.
Montenegro explained that sustained power does not necessarily mean lower power rates.
He
said energy sourced from fossil fuel like diesel and coal will remain
costly compared to the electricity sourced from hydro-power.
“Mindanao
is currently served by 60 percent renewable energy with 54 percent
hydro and six percent geothermal and 40 percent fossil fuel consequently
offering a competitive rate compared to Luzon,” Montenegro said. (PIA
11-Joey Sem G. Dalumpines)
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