January 16, 2025

Emmanuel "Manny" F. Piñol

Official Website

BLACKOUTS TO HIT MINDANAO AGAIN; POWER PLANTS SHUT DOWN AUGUST

By Iris Gonzales (The Philippine Star)

MANILA, Philippines – Mindanao would likely experience power outages again beginning August because of the scheduled maintenance shutdown of some plants, Energy Secretary Carlos Jericho Petilla said the other day.

“Starting August, there will be blackouts again,” Petilla said, although he noted that the power outages may not be as severe as what the region experienced during the summer months.

Last summer, Mindanao experienced power outages of up to 10 hours, depending on the area.

Some power plants in Mindanao will shut down for maintenance activities anytime from July to December 2013, according to data from the Department of Energy (DOE).

Petilla said August would be a critical month when the 210-megawatt (MW) STEAG coal plant in Mindanao shuts down for maintenance from August to November. At least 115 MW of STEAG’s output would not be available, Petilla said.

Similarly, the Pulangi IV hydropower plant also has a scheduled maintenance shutdown on different dates from August to September, which could affect roughly 160 MW.

The Agus 6 hydropower plant is also scheduled to shut down for preventive maintenance on different dates from August to December and which could affect 25 to 50 MW.

Petilla gave assurance that the blackouts would not be as severe as what the region experienced during the summer months.

He also said that it would be better for Mindanao to have the maintenance activities implemented now than in the summer months when demand is at its peak.

He is counting on the modular generator set program approved by President Aquino to help address the problem.

“The target is to start implementing that this year,” Petilla said.

Aquino earlier issued Executive Order 137 mandating the implementation of the Mindanao Modular Generator Sets Program to help avert another critical power situation in the region.

Under the EO-mandated program, electric cooperatives would generate the capacities they need either via the rental or acquisition option.

These gensets would help electric cooperatives address the power supply crunch in the island, according to the EO signed on July 12.

The EO mandates the use of roughly P4.5 billion from the Malampaya funds as loans to Mindanao-based cooperatives to be administered by the National Electrification Administration.

Mindanao-based electric cooperatives source part of their power requirements from the Agus-Pulangi hydropower plant but this is not enough.

The DOE has said that the Mindanao grid would need additional 38 MW this year.

Petilla, however, said the long-term solution is to have new power plants, but these are expected to come in only in 2015.

DOE Mindanao field office director Manuel Llaneza said the Mindanao grid will normalize by the third quarter of 2015 with the 600-MW capacity of baseload plants in the cities of Davao, Zamboanga and Cagayan de Oro as well as in Sarangani, in addition to short-term measures such as the use of modular generator sets.

“To be able to address the current demand, we need traditional sources of energy, especially since a growing economy translates to increased power consumption,” Llaneza said.

The government is still pushing for the renewable energy program, according to Jesus Tamang, director of DOE’s energy planning and policy bureau.

Tamang said renewable energy sources are known for their seasonality as wind power needs wind and solar plants need sunlight.

The DOE has reportedly been receiving many applications for renewable energy projects and if these would be realized, these would translate to additional power. Biomass projects reportedly make up the bulk of these applications. – With Edith Regalado

 

Source: Manny Piñol

You may have missed

21-Year-Old Cotabato Airport: Sad Story Of Childish Politics Twenty-one years after work on the Cotabato Rural Airport was started and 15 years after the Runway and Terminal Building construction were completed, it remains unused, a sad testament to the evils of petty and childish politics which had prevailed in North Cotabato. For people to truly understand this tragic narrative of a project which could have brought progress to the province, here is the historical account of the Mlang Airport Project: 1. I was a young Mayor of Mlang (1995-1998) when I envisioned the growth of my town into an agro-industrlialized city and thought an Airport would be critical in realizing that vision; 2. With the help of the Vice Mayor then, Luigi Buenaflor Cuerpo, whose family owned most of the areas in the former Hacienda de Tomas Buenaflor, I presented the idea to the elders of the clan and they loved the idea but since there were no funds available for the project, it remained just a dream; 3. In 1998, after one term as Mayor of Mlang, I was elected Governor of North Cotabato and I pursued the vision of building an airport in my hometown; 4. In 2003, the Sangguniang Panlalawigan authorized the purchase of 62 hectares of land in the former Hacienda Buenaflor for the purpose of building the airport; 5. With an initial P30-M Grant Fund which was provided by then Pres. Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo sourced from the Department of Energy (which at the time, operated the Mt. Apo Geothermal Project), the project was started in 2004; 6. By 2007, my term as Governor ended and I was succeeded by Governor Jesus N. Sacdalan. I served as his Vice Governor. Gov. Sacdalan continued the project; 7. In 2009, the Runway and Terminal Building of the Mlang Airport were completed and Pres. Gloria Macapagal Arroyo arrived for the blessing and inauguration; 8. In the 2010 elections, Gov. Sacdalan ran for Congress in the 1st District of the Province while I attempted to regain the Governorship but I lost to then Congresswoman Emmylou Taliño-Santos (now Mendoza); That was when work at the Airport was stopped and to justify the suspension of the Airport Development, the new administration claimed that the documents covering the purchase of the land were not perfect. I was accused of owning the land which was, of course, ridiculous and false. It was also claimed that the project was started without a Feasibility Study which again is a big lie, for how would it be given a budget if there was no study conducted. In fact, I made a public declaration that I was willing to help perfect the documents if they needed my signature on the alleged incomplete documents but my offer was ignored. In 2019, when former Congresswoman Nancy Catamco won as Governor, the alleged missing documents were recovered or reconstructed and perfected. That was when work was started again in the airport. Unfortunately, in 2022, Gov. Catamco lost in a tightly contested election to then Vice Governor Emmylou Taliño-Mendoza before she could turn over the Airport Land Property which is owned by the Provincial Government to the Dept. of Transportation and the Civil Aeronautics Authority of the Philippines for it to be operational. The incumbent Governor is the Chairman of the Regional Development Council and she could have given utmost priority to the completion of Airport. Access to funds for the completion of the project would not be difficult because Speaker Martin Romualdez is the nephew-in-law of her husband, TUCP Partylist Congressman Raymond Mendoza. The real reason why the Mlang Airport Development has dragged for 21 years is because it is identified as the Brainchild and Pet Project of former Governor Manny Piñol and the current leadership dread the thought of seeing planes loaded with passengers and fruits from Cotabato to the big cities and the people giving credit to Piñol for initiating the project. The airport is for the people of North Cotabato now and the next generation and I would not care if she names it after her grandfather or whoever. This narrative is my account of the real story behind the delay in the completion of the Central Mindanao Airport which I know will be refuted by the other party. So, here is my challenge: Let’s hold a Public Debate/Forum on the real and true reasons behind the delay in the completion of the Central Mindanao Airport. I am willing to face anybody from their side in that debate, anytime and anywhere. The People of North Cotabato deserve to know the truth. #WeDontOwnGovernment! #TheTruthWillSetUsFree!