Ifugao mini-hydro plant employs locals
>> Friday, August 28, 2015
By Marcelo B. Lihgawon
ASIPULO, Ifugao -- Aside from providing
clean energy, the newly inaugurated Likud Mini-Hydro Power Development
Project in Barangay Haliap here has opened jobs for local residents.
At least 10
residents here were hired to manage the LMPDP which the
Department of Energy formally turned over to the province last
month in a ceremony attended by community, government and Japanese
officials.
LMPDP is
funded by a grant aid from the Japanese government through the Japan International
Cooperation Agency as token of friendship and cooperation between the two
countries.
According to
engineer Carmelita Buyuccan, provincial planning and development coordinator,
hired job orders consist of a plant supervisor, six plant operators
and three water guards, who passed training and requirement needed
for the job.
The
provincial local government unit will pay daily wages of plant workers.
The
mini-hydro project that covers the host barangays of Haliap and Panubtuban of
Asipulo and Barangay Duit of Kiangan is set to boost the Rice Terraces
Conservation Fund for preservation of the rice terraces and stabilize energy
supply with lower electric tariff in the province.
Meanwhile,
Undersecretary Donato Marcos who represented DOE Energy Sec. Zenaida Monsada as keynote speaker
during the inauguration, handed to Gov. Denis Habawel the key of
responsibility for the management of the LMPDP.
In her
speech read by Marcos, Monsada stated that the LMPDP is a collaboration between
the Japanese government through the JICA and the Philippine government through
the DOE and National Economic and Development Authority.
It is one of
two projects under grant agreement executed last April 30, 2013, to promote
viability and sustainability of loan agreement via mini-hydro power system by
irrigation canal.
The power
plant will generate revenues to fund support and rehabilitate and preserve the
rice terraces consistent with the advocacy of the Japanese and Philippine
governments to augment energy supply and minimize greenhouse gas emission to
protect the environment, she added.
With the
implementation of Renewable Energy law of 2008, the government has provided
generous fiscal and non-fiscal incentives to renewable energy developers and
suppliers and manufacturers to accelerate development of renewable energy
sources towards achieving a green economy and protecting the environment for
the future generation.
Habawel
lauded the Japanese government, DOE, Ifugao officials and the community
including the local contractor and workers for the construction of the
LMPDP.
“Although it
went through a lot of challenges during the construction period, it’s a
situation you will see all sectors came together towards the same objectives
and resolved whatever problem that came along the way,” Habawel said.
He also
thanked the DOE for approving the project and allowing themselves to be the
conduit to bring aid from the Japanese government through the JICA to the
people of Ifugao.
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