Angry power consumers in Cotabato barricade vs
Lopez-owned geothermal plants
In May last year, power consumers in
Cotabato province hold a big protest as they slammed the daily rotational
brownouts despite the existence and operations of the Mt. Apo geothermal plants.
(davaotoday.com file photo by Alex D. Lopez)
“This is a manifestation of the
peoples’ anger over the recurring six to eight hours daily rotational
brown-outs,” Ruby Padilla-Sison, secretary general for Makabayan-North Cotabato
By DANILDA L. FUSILERO
Davao Today
KIDAPAWAN CITY, Cotabato, Philippines — About 1,000 electric power
consumers here blocked the road towards the Mt. Apo geothermal plants owned by
the Energy Development Corporation (EDC), a Lopez-owned generation facility
early Thursday.
Led by the militant Koalisyong
Makabayan, the barricaders who came from the towns of Magpet, Arakan Valley,
Makilala, Tulunan, Kabacan and Pres. Roxas, stationed along the intersection of
national highway-Sudapin road as early as 4 AM and protested until noon today.
“This is a manifestation of the
peoples’ anger over the recurring six to eight hours daily rotational
brown-outs,” Ruby Padilla-Sison, secretary general for Makabayan-North
Cotabato, told davaotoday.com.
Kidapawenos, she noted,
“are not morons to be fooled by promises of abundant and cheap power
supply from their very own Mt. Apo.”
Makabayan pressed for the
immediate release of the 25 percent load dispatch from the Mt. Apo Geothermal
Plants which has an installed capacity of 104 Mega-watts.
Under the Department of Energy (DOE)
Act of 1992, the local government unit (LGU) that hosts a power-generating
facility has a preferential right of at least 25-percent emergency load
dispatch. A Memorandum of Agreement entered into by the host-LGU with the
then Philippine National Oil Company (PNOC) in the early ‘90s, also provided a
similar condition.
“If it’s true that we are in crisis, why then is the EDC depriving us of such
right? Is this the prize of privatization, allowing EDC to withhold our
claim and rechannel our demands to the defunct PNOC?,” Sison said.
Bai Norma Capuyan, third nominee of
the Katribu Partylist, echoed Sison’s statement, even recalling that they were
those protested the desecration of Apo Sandawa in the ‘90s.
“They (government) used to tell us
that the Mt. Apo geothermal project was of national interest, that it would
benefit us. But now the government wants us to suffer the brunt of their
inefficiency in managing the power industry,” she told davaotoday.com.
The daily rotational brownout
started early this year after the National Power Corporation (NPC)/Power Sector
Assets and Liabilities Management (Psalm) arbitrarily cut the power supply of
the Cotabato Electric Cooperative (Cotelco) by 30 percent. In March, the
situation worsened as the 13 MW supply from NPC/Psalm was augmented with only 5
MW from the Therma Marine, Inc (TMI). Cotelco needs 28 MW of power supply
to answer the province’s peak demand.
Cotelco Manager Godofredo Homez
projected that from this month to June “the situation will worsen,” as the
expected allocation from the NPC/Psalm is only of 8 MW while that of the TMI
contract is only 5 MW. For months now, Cotelco is augmenting its power
supply by “remarketing” the grid.
“Dili na maasahan ang remarketing
karon kay online or operational napud ang ubang probinsya nga naigo sa bagyong
Pablo. Kani tung power supply nga wala nagamit sa probinsya sa Davao ug
ComVal kay nag-undergo pa sila og rehabilitation,” Homez said.
Earlier, sectoral groups like the
Kidapawan City-Local Council of Women and non-government Philippine Rural
Reconstruction Movement petitioned the DOE for the immediate release of the
city’s preferential 25 percent emergency load dispatch. Recently,
Kidapawan-Power, a broad alliance of power consumers from the business sector,
professionals, youth, civil society groups, religious sectors and
cause-oriented organizations convened and expressed their plans to stage a series
of protest actions after the May 13 elections. (Danilda L. Fusilero/davaotoday.com)