Was the operation of the Asin hydros illegal?
>> Monday, January 20, 2014
LIGHT AT THE END OF THE TUNNEL
Roger D. Sinot
TUBA,
Benguet- Tuba folks said that the Baguio City Government is illegally operating
the controversial Asin Power Plants (APP) saying they had exhausted all legal
options to compel the latter to pay for the use of their lands where the hydros
and other facilities are located since the beginning of the City's take over.
A
task force was created by no less than Bengue Governor Nestor Fongwan headed by
then Provincial Board Member Nardo B. Cayat in 2007, where the body found out
that the Baguio City Government did not have legal papers to prove it owned the
lots where the power plants were were located. The Governor advised the group
to write the Municipal Mayor not to issue a business permit to the City
Government until such was addressed.
Mayor
Florencio Bentrez and all the Tuba councilors except Hon. Blas Dalus were
castigated by the organization for coming up with a consensus that they would
affirm the stand of the Baguio City Government on the matter in spite of their
plight. The councilors then who reportedly backed the stand to issue a permit
to the City were Adora Paus, Cris Akia, Veronica Apil, (the late) Dick Balting,
ABC president Zaldy Guileng, Pedro Esteban, Clarita Sal-ongan, and Jerome
Palaoag.
As
early as January 04, 2007, the Tadiangan Nangalisan Hydro Ancestral Landowners
Association (TNHALA) agreed to file a petition and issuance of a temporary
restraining order and preliminary mandatory injunction against the City of
Baguio for the stoppage of its unwanted take-over of the said hydro plants,
since these plants are within the Ancestral Domain of Tuba, Benguet. The
following week, it filed a case with the NCIP-Legal office after the claims of
the landowners were identified by NCIP-Benguet headed by Ms. Nora Ramos.
The
City of Baguio for a long time had benefited from the resources of Benguet
particularly in Tuba, along the Asin area. The land claimants had been praying
that no such repetition of exploitation as experienced in the past will ever
come out between the two sister communities where one enriches itself out of
the resources of another. This is not a good and proper concept of the
Baguio-La Trinidad-Itogon-Sablan-Tuba-Tublay Program or BLISST.
The
landowners comprising more than a hundred at present said that the City
Government does not have an environmental clearance certificate (ECC) from the
Department of Environment and Natural Resources to operate the plants.
They
also said the City does not have a Certificate of Compliance (COC) from the
Energy Regulatory Commission (ERC) pursuant to the Implementing Rules and
Regulations (IRR) of the Electric Power Industry Reform Act (EPIRA Law) also
known as Republic Act 9136 of 2001.
Aside
from these, they said the City Government has never conducted a "Free,
Prior, Informed Consent (FPIC) from the National Commission on Indigenous
Peoples that is a requirement before it can start operating the plants".
The
IRR states that "No person or entity may engage in the generation of
electricity unless such person or entity, private or public, may engage in the
generation of electricity unless such person or entity has received a COC from
ERC to operate facilities used in the generation of electricity".
The
association had sent a series of letters to the City Government to act on their
demands prior to the turn-over of the facilities from HEDCOR to the City on
December 26, 2006 but were ignored. The group even cited in their letters that
all communications to Government offices should be answered within 15 days,
according to Civil Service Commission (CSC) rules.
The
case with the NCIP-CAR was to make the City Government cease and desist from
using their power plants until it would pay for the use of their lands.
Seemingly being ignored, this made the group to decide to shut down the intake
valves leading to plant no. 1 that supplied water to the power plants, with the
consent of the water guards.
When
the City Government through their representatives seriously went to ERC-DOE for
a franchise (COC), it found out that a memorandum of agreement with the other
party is a must. This is an agreement of the buyer and the seller. The Benguet
Electric Cooperative or BENECO has the license to buy but the City has no
licence to sell, which makes the operation illegal from the beginning.
A
compromise agreement was done four years ago to resolve this woe. Until now, no
payment was made.
Now,
you know why the operation of the AsinHydros illegal. What Now?
To
the stake holders of the AsinHydros; the landowners, the Province of Benguet,
the municipality of Tuba, the Barangaqys of Tadiangan, and Nangalisan, the City
of Baguio. What now?
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