Renewable Energy in the Visayas Cebu Green Economic Series: Renewable Energy Summit March 7, 2011 ATTY. JOSEFINA PATRICIA M. ASIRIT Chief of Staff/Undersecretary Outline • Power situation in the Visayas • Renewable Energy in Visayas • National Renewable Energy Plan Actual Power Sector Situation: Visayas 2010 vs 2009 = 15.3% Demand Increased 2010 Demand Curtailed at Peak (MW) May 25(66 MW) Jan 6 (22 MW) Jul 5 (39 MW) Dec 16(106 MW) Nov 24(29 MW) Sep 20 (46 MW) Aug 31 (34 MW) Jun 4 (71 MW) Apr 28 (88 MW) 2010 Highest Peak = 1,431 MW Oct 4(48 MW) 2009 Highest Peak = 1,241 MW Feb 25 (35 MW) CEDC Testing & Commissioning of Unit 1 (72 MW) Min Capacity = 862 MW PEDC Testing & CEDC Testing & Commissioning of Commissioning of Unit 1 (72 MW) Unit 2 (72 MW) Max Capacity = 1,417 MW 2008 Highest Peak = 1,176 MW 2008 Lowest Peak = 587 MW Typhoon Frank 2009 Lowest Peak = 852 MW 2010 Lowest Peak = 944 MW January February March April May Note: Leyte-Luzon HVDC power flow not considered June July August September October November December Source of Data: DOR of NGCP Actual Power Sector Situation: January 2011 Visayas GOMP System Capacity Max Capacity = 1,960 MW Actual Capacity and Demand GOMP Rated Capacity = 2,095 MW Min Capacity = 1,743 MW CDPP U3,6 MW (1-20 Jan) CPPC U6, 7 MW (7-19 Jan) PB 103 U1,6 MW (1-31 Jan) PDPP 3,10 MW (10-14 Jan) PPC U10,5 MW (14-17 Jan) Max Capacity = 1,528 MW Implemented MLD due to low system generation Min Capacity = 985 MW LGPP U2, 37 MW(5- 18 Jan) UMPP U1 ,30 MW (8-17 Jan) 2011 Min Peak = 983 MW Min Maintenance =135 MW 2011 Max Peak = 1,322 MW PB101,32 MW (1-31 Jan)ES PDPP 3, 12.5 MW (7-31 Jan)FO TPC,45 MW (1-31 Jan) PDPP 1,36 MW (1-31 Jan) Max Maintenance =353 MW CTPP 1, 50 MW (18-28 Jan) TPC B6,33 MW (5-8 Jan) TPC B7,33 MW (15-30 Jan) Source: GOMP of NGCP LGPP U1, 37 MW(1- 16 Jan)FO LGPP U2, 37 MW(17- 31 Jan)MO NNGP 12 MW (1-31 Jan)MO UMPP U2 ,30 MW (21-31 Jan)MO UMPP U3 ,30 MW (1-14 Jan)MO Testing & Commissioning KSPC 140 MW PEDC 70 MW CEDC 224 MW CTPP 1, 50 MW (27-31 Jan)FO Source: DOR of NGCP Legend: Geothermal Coal Hydro Oilbased MO = Maintenance Outage FO = Forced Outage RS = Reserve Shutdown Note: Leyte-Luzon HVDC power flow not considered Power Sector Situation: Expectations in 2011 2011 Visayas GOMP ASSUMPTIONS: 1. Excludes Embedded Generators ( 33 MW Installed 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. Capacity) Cebu Land base Gas Turbine (54 MW) not available for dispatch Cebu Energy Development Corporation 3 x 82 MW (130 MW) all units available starting January 2011 KEPHILCO (200 MW) and Panay Energy Development Corp. 2 x 82 MW (PEDC 164 MW) not yet considered in NGCP GOMP Unplanned/Forced Outage not yet considered Normal Hydro Condition Leyte-Luzon HVDC Power flow not considered 2010 Gross Power Generation, GWh Wind Solar 0% 0% Geothermal 15% Biomass 0% Hydro 12% Natural Gas 29% Coal 35% Oil Based 9% Total Generation = 65,795 GWh Awarded RE contracts in Visayas Wind Projects Potential Capacity Province Capacity (MW) Aklan 50 Iloilo 33 Guimaras 80 Negros Occidental 15 Bohol 10 Total: 188 MW Hydropower Projects Province Potential Capacity (MW) Aklan 40.8 Antique 39.9 Iloilo 32 Negros Occidental 31 Bohol 9.2 Cebu 0.5 Negros Oriental 73.7 Total: 227.1 *Installed capacity: 10 MW in Antique Ocean Energy • Deep Ocean Power Philippines, Inc. owns the only RE contract for ocean energy in Visayas. • • Investment = P1.5 million Potential site: Anini-y, Antique Ocean Energy Biomass Projects Province Capacity for Export (MW) Capacity for own use (MW) Aklan 12 0 Capiz 0 5.8 Iloilo 65 0 8.5 74.7 Negros Occiden tal Leyte Total: 0 11 85.5 91.5 Total Investment (awarded contracts): P17.4 billion Geothermal Projects Province Potential Capacity (MW) Negros Occidental Biliran Leyte Total: Installed Capacity (MW) 241.88 20 0 722.68 964.56 National Renewable Energy Plan • Target Completion: 1st Quarter, 2011 • Collaboration among Renewable Energy Management Bureau (REMB) and all DOE Bureaus • Outlines Target Dates for RE Policy Mechanisms in 2011 a. Renewable Portfolio Standards (DOE Draft) – 2nd Quarter b. Feed-In Tariff Rates (NREB submission) – 2nd Quarter c. Green Energy Option Program – 2nd Quarter d. Net-Metering – 3rd Quarter e. Transmission System Development – 3rd Quarter f. Distribution System Development – 3rd Quarter National Renewable Energy Plan • Creation of Renewable Energy Market and RE Registrar – 1st Quarter, 2012 • Off-Grid Development – 4th Quarter, 2011 • Promulgation of Rules and Regulations a. RETF Administration – 2nd Quarter b. Mechanism for RE Host Community/LGU Incentives c. BIR-DOF Revenue Regulations for Fiscal Incentives Energy Reform Agenda “Energy Access for More” A key priority of government to mainstream access of the greater majority to reliable energy services and fuel, most importantly, local productivity and countryside development Good Governance thru stakeholder participation, transparency, multi-sectoral partnership and use of ICT Ensure Energy Security Achieve Optimal Energy Pricing Develop a Sustainable Energy System Thank you