‘Luzon to suffer severe power crisis in 2016’
>> Wednesday, December 10, 2014
By
Dexter A. See
BAGUIO CITY – Luzon will suffer from severe
power crisis in 2016 once no dependable power plant will be commissioned
anytime which would be disastrous to the economic growth that it has gained
over the past several years, a power industry expert recently said here.
Prof. Rowaldo R. delMundo, associate
professor of the University of the Philippines – National Engineering Center
(UP-NEC), said Luzon is experiencing first stage of power crisis because of
rotating brownouts in major generation plants and simultaneous shutdown of
major power plants which play a key role in sustaining the power supply of the
grid.
“If we encounter one day of rotating
brownout in a generation plant in a year, we are now in the first stage of
power crisis. We are expected to encounter three days of rotating brownouts in
some power plants which would increase to ten days next year and thirty five
days in 2016. By 2017, the projected rotating brownouts will be ninety two
days,” delMundo said.
Del Mundo said simultaneous shutdown of the
3,000megawatt San Lorenzo and Sta. Rita power plants in Southern Luzon and the
1,200-megawatt coal-fired power plant in Sual- Pangasinan for emergency repairs
could also be considered as initial stages of the expected occurrence of power
crisis in Luzon.
He cited slim power reserves of Luzon that
ranges from 600 megawatts to around 1,200 megawatts per day is also an
indication that there is really a power crisis in Luzon because the power
reserves are way below the industry requirement in order to sustain the sudden
surge in power demand as a result of the influx of investments in the different
parts of the island.
“Luzon has to have power reserves
equivalent to 28 percent of the total power requirement to ensure that we will
be spared from the possibility of having continuous rotating brownouts,
especially in the coming years,” del Mundo added.
He claimed the huge requirement for power
reserves will be a guarantee for buffer supply of the grid once dependable
power plants will undergo emergency shutdown or scheduled preventive
maintenance in order to keep the supply at a reliable level.
Currently, the power requirement of Luzon is
more or less 9,000 megawatts per day but the available supply is around 9,800
to 10,000 megawatts.
According to him, what contributed to the
impending power crisis in Luzon is the failure of the national government to
commission a new power plant, except for the 600-megawatt clean coal power
plant in Mariveles, Bataan, which was commissioned after the passage of the
Electric Power Industry Reform Act (EPIRA) in 2001.
“It takes five years to commission a
new power plant that is why we have to start the building of power plants now
in order to mitigate the expected serious negative effects of power crisis in
the coming years,” said delMundo.
He added Luzon could suffer the current
rotating brownouts in Mindanao which was 188 days per year since last year,
thus, the government, power distribution companies and electric cooperatives
should start working out the commissioning of additional power plants in order
to stabilize the fragile situation of power in the
grid.
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