Mt Prov execs eye millions from hydropower income
>> Tuesday, August 20, 2013
By Gina
Dizon
BONTOC, Mountain Province – Provincial
officials are now eyeing environment-friendly hydropower to boost local
government coffers with millions of pesos in income.
Mountain Province
which graduated as one of the poorest Club 20 provinces in the country has
huge, untapped potentials of hydropower energy with build –operate-
transfer schemes being encouraged.
Gov. Leonard Mayaen
bared these during a media forum with local government officials
including mayors Anthony Wooden of Tadian, Abraham Akilit of Bauko
and Gabino Ganggangan of Sadanga, and heads of line agency offices.
In recent forum,
engineering consultant David Tauli said the
province holds 63,300 kilowatt or 63.3 megawatt
potential equal to 248.8 gigawatt hours (GWH) per year able to
generate an income of minimum of P10,740
million.
Compared to the
4,300 kilowatt or 4.3 megawatt consumption of Mountain Province
Electric Company purchased from the national grid, the province’s
hydropower potential poses considerable wealth which could
practically mean subsidized if not free electricity for its constituent
households.
Hydropower potentials
are found in Barlig along the Tanudanriver having 2,400 KW or
9.4 GWH/ year, Bauko with Enodey at 7,000KW or 21.5 GWH/year; Besao with
20,900KW at 64.1GWH/year; Bontoc at Talubin with 10,800 KW or
70.4GWH/year; Natonin at Siffu river with 5,150KW with 18 GWH/year; Sabangan
with 14,000KW with 55 GWH/year and Tadian with Dicapan at 3,000KW at 10.5
GWH/year.
HEDCOR has already
began construction of a 14 megawatt hydro power project at
Napua-Namatec, Sabangan.
The local BIMAKA
Renewable Energy Development Corporation has its 15megawatt mini
hydro plan with the project intended to be built along the Layugan River
at Besao; now in its application stage at the Department of Energy.
The multinational Asia
Pacific company intends to build a 2.4 megawatt mini hydro Dicapan project in
barangay Lubon, Tadian and another 2.4 megawatt mini hydro at Upper Siffuriver
in barangay Balangao, Natonin; 3MW at lower Siffu river at Balangao and
2.4 MW along the Tanudan river in Barangay Lias, Barlig.
Now local government units
plan to build their own hydro energy plants.
For Mayor Abraham
Akilit of Bauko town which traces headwaters four big rivers-
Chico, Agno, Abra, and Magat- Akilit intends to build a mini hydro
dam and divert the waters of the Chico and Dekyao rivers at Monamon
barangay towards Abit river through the construction of a one
kilometer tunnel.
While this proposal
alarmed irrigation water users downstream, Akilit said not all of the water
shall be diverted and that the waters shall rejoin the Chico River.
The former regional
director of the National Irrigation Administration said the local government of
Bauko also plans to construct a multi-purpose minihydro power plant for
domestic water in Abatan, Buguias and Mankayan town with water Along the Agno
River.
Mayor Anthony Wooden
of Tadian said their LGU is intent on taking over the mini hydro
project from Asia Pac.
Along with some
LGU officials, they shall be visit the mini hydro project of
San Luis, Aurora and get some insights on how San Luis LGU is
managing its hydro power project.
The LGU-managed San
Luis mini-hydro power plant (SLMHPP) is a 750 kW plant generating 4.0
million kWh per year financed by a loan from Land Bank composing
75% of the P80.3 million project cost and 25% equity from San Luis
municipality.
It started operations
in June 2011 with contract for the supply of energy with AURELCO at PhP 4.4395
per kWh.
Tauli said LGUs
can apply for loans at banks for the construction of their intent
to build mini hydro power plants with construction to be done by private
corporation –experts.
These
“non-recourse projects” are loans incurred for mini hydro paid by
revenues from the project, he added.
Tauli who holds more
than 30 years of experience on electricity distribution utility
engineering and management encouraged local government
units to go into Build Operate and Transfer arrangements with
expert - private firms.
And because private
companies don’t own the water, wind and sun, the
firms should turn over the energy plant after 20 to 25 years
of operation after they have recovered their capital,
the former Cagayan Electric and Light Power Company) CEPALCO vice
chairman added.
Researcher on
renewable energy and former staff with SIBAT (Sibol ng Agham at
Teknolohiya) Jove Benosa said water rights of folks downstream have to be
taken note of in the implementation of hydro projects. SIBAT has been into
intensive community based renewable energy projects for the past 20
years.
Gwen Longid of
the Tangguyub Peoples Center also said continuing studies be done
on the implementation of hydropower projects with the least destruction
to the environment.
Ensuring the
continuity of the watershed is an equally demanding
responsibility to keep the waters flowing.Akilit said
watersheds of Bauko are in need of protection from encroaching
vegetable gardeners and forest fires warranting the need for immediate
attention.
Wooden
said preserving watersheds of Tadian is observed
by applying the peoples’ customary practises on watershed
protection via the batangan system firmed up by local legislative action.
Reforestation expense
can be sourced from earnings from the project with fifty centavos
or more per kWh allocated for watershed development, Tauli said.
At present only
one-half of a centavo (PhP 0.005) per kWh of the generation of hydro projects
is allocated for watershed development.
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