Chiz seeks
incentives for renewable energy developers to lure investors, curb
carbon emission
By Office of Senator Chiz
Escudero
December 1, 2015
PASAY CITY – Sen.
Francis “Chiz” Escudero said the government should come up with
incentives to encourage renewable energy developers to invest in areas
that remain without power and at the same time, help the country
fulfill its pledge to address climate change.
Escudero made the proposal
as the Philippines commits to a global effort to reduce the world’s
carbon emissions at the 21st Conference of Parties (COP21) to the UN
Framework Convention on Climate Change in Paris.
The Philippines chairs the
Climate Vulnerable Forum, a group of 20 nations most vulnerable to the
impacts of climate change.
“If we are serious about
reducing carbon emissions and making good on our international
commitments, then we should push for the development of renewable
energy sources,” Escudero said.
The Department of Energy
(DOE) estimates that the Philippines will need an additional 11,400
megawatts of generating capacity to meet the demand for electricity
from 2016 to 2030 – an opportunity for power producers to consider
renewable energy development, the senator said.
Escudero, who heads the
Senate Committee on Environment and Natural Resources, said renewable
energy sources are not only sustainable but cheaper than fossil fuel
because the sources, such as wind and sunshine, are virtually free.
Unfortunately, as of 2014,
only 37 percent of generated power was supplied by renewable sources
while 63 percent came from non-renewable energy, mainly coal,
according to DOE data. Of the renewable sources, less than one percent
was from wind and solar energy.
“It’s pitiful. We have the
resources that we need right here that can solve our problem of
insufficient, unreliable and expensive power supply. But we’re not
developing them, so we have to ask ourselves: why isn’t there enough
interest in this business?” Escudero said.
Escudero, who is running as
Sen. Grace Poe’s vice president, said the government should study the
possibility of giving tax incentives to companies that would go into
renewable energy development, especially in areas with power problems
like Mindanao.
He also proposed conducting
a nationwide survey to identify which provinces could be tapped for
various renewable energy projects.
“Having access to
electricity is a basic right of all Filipinos, and our goal is to
provide this access to low-income families without costing them half
their take-home pay,” Escudero said. “We cannot move forward with
genuine economic development unless the problem of insufficient power
supply is addressed.”
He said the government
should exhaust all means to bring affordable electricity to some 15
million Filipinos who still have no electricity in their homes.
“It is time to harness the
resources that we have to produce the energy that we need. Otherwise,
we will forever be at the mercy of the big power firms who control the
supply of power, and hence, the amount that we pay for electricity,”
the senator said.
Philippine households pay
the fifth highest power rate in the world, according to the
International Energy Agency. In 2011, households here paid $ .2460/kWh
for electricity, only slightly lower than Denmark’s $.3563/kWh, the
highest electricity rate in the world for residential consumers.