Technological
progress in producing wind energy has already cut production costs in half since
1990, and it is expected that the gap between the power production costs of wind
energy and those of fossil energy sources will continue to narrow.
“Wind
power takes us one crucial step closer to energy independence," said Lory
Tan, president of WWF-Philippines.
Tan
explained wind power “builds economic strength by stabilizing business costs,
insulating us from pollution and the unpredictable prices of imported oil and
coal, while preserving foreign exchange for other more critical needs.”
Philippine
Energy Secretary Raphael P.M. Lotilla congratulated NorthWind for the landmark
project, which, he said, shows the “government's persistence at tapping
indigenous and renewable energy sources as a strategy to move away from
dependence on imported oil, especially at a time of high oil prices.”
"We
need a relentless effort to harness our own energy sources and not be forever
held hostage by volatile international oil prices," he added.
WWF
estimates that the Philippines could save US$2.9 billion in fossil-fuel imports
over the next 10 years if the country’s vast renewable energy resources are
tapped.
Liam
Salter, WWF International's regional climate and energy program director, said,
“Across Asia-Pacific the message is the same—spiraling coal and oil prices
and dependency upon imported fuels, combined with health and environmental
risks, are forcing governments to radically rethink the way they supply their
people with energy.”
“Wind
and other renewables are central to a new way of thinking—we predict the trend
will continue,” Salter added.
Ferdinand
Dumlao, special projects officer at the Ilocos Norte provincial government,
said, "In terms of pricing, fossil fuels are subject to foreign market
pricing and currency fluctuations. These two factors are risks in terms of
pricing. Our leadership had analyzed that it is not to our advantage to have
fossil fuel power plants."
The
Ilocos Norte provincial government had received proposals from several fossil
fuel companies. "There was an offer from a foreign company to put up a
bunker sea oil power plant, but it was anti-environment and it was also not a
guarantee for a stable power pricing," said Dumlao.
The
Philippines should shun away “dirty and expensive” energy sources.
Melvin Purzuelo of Green Forum |
|
He
further said, "Before the establishment of our wind farm, there was also
another proposal to put up a coal plant. It was a bit inviting because it was
cheaper compared to the oil-based power plant. But again, the people of Ilocos
Norte rejected the idea for similar reasons.”
The
Philippine government has set a goal of doubling the renewable energy base
capacity for power generation by 2013, lessening the country’s dependence on
imported energy sources such as diesel and coal, and broadening the resource
base with an indigenous and environmentally desirable option.
This
will add another 4,700 megawatts of clean energy mainly from geothermal, wind,
solar, hydro and biomass resources to the country’s power generation capacity,
and will bring its share in the nation’s energy mix to nearly 40 percent.
The
government plans to gradually reduce the country’s dependence of imported fuel
such as oil and gas. Imported oil ate up 39.2 percent of last year’s total
energy sources.
According
to an analysis done by WWF's PowerSwitch! campaign, the wind resource potential
in the Philippines could be as much as 7,400 megawatts, enough to power 19
million homes.
Sustainable
energy campaigners welcomed the government’s new thrust. Melvin Purzuelo of
Green Forum, an environmental advocacy group, said the Philippines should shun
away “dirty and expensive” energy sources. Instead, he said, it should
exploit its sustainable and renewable energy potentials.
Putting
Natural Resources to Good Use
In
a study done by the United States’ National Renewable Energy Laboratory
(US-NREL) using Geographic Information System technology on the wind resource of
the Philippines, over 10,000 square kilometers of windy land areas in the
Philippines have been estimated to exist with “good-to-excellent” wind
resource potential.
Using
conservative assumptions of about 7 megawatts per square kilometer, this windy
land could support over 70,000 megawatts of potential installed capacity, the
report said.
The
wind mapping results also showed many areas of good-to-excellent wind resource
for utility-scale applications or excellent wind resource for village power
applications, particularly in the northern and central regions of the
Philippines.
Considering
only the areas with good-to-excellent wind resource, there are 47 provinces in
the Philippines with at least 500 megawatts of wind potential and 25 provinces
with at least 1,000 megawatts of wind potential.
Cleaner
sources of energy are slowly making its round in the Philippines, which is
currently the biggest producer of geothermal energy with a 1,983-megawatt
capacity, second only to the United States.
WWF-Philippines
asserts that renewable energy systems make economic sense as they can generate
jobs and save the country’s dollar reserves from buying imported fuel.
Renewable
energy sources like wind also keep global warming from getting worse. According
to WWF’s PowerSwitch campaign, “Generating electricity through the burning
of carbon-rich coal has a greater impact on the atmosphere than any other single
human activity.”
Green
Forum’s Purzuelo said wind energy is produced by the wind, so “it's
definitely a clean source of fuel.” Wind energy does not pollute the air like
power plants that rely on combustion of fossil fuels, such as coal or natural
gas. Wind turbines don't produce atmospheric emissions that cause acid rain or
greenhouse gasses, he said.
Ferdinand
Dumlao, special projects officer at the Ilocos Norte provincial government, said
they welcomed the NorthWind project because they know the ill effects of fossil
fuel power plants. “They emit carbon dioxide that harms our environment. Coal
power plants also emit dust that destroys our crops," he said.
The
United States Department of Energy (USDE) said, “Wind energy relies on the
renewable power of the wind, which can't be used up. Wind is actually a form of
solar energy; winds are caused by the heating of the atmosphere by the sun, the
rotation of the earth, and the earth's surface irregularities.”
It
stressed that wind energy “is one of the lowest-priced renewable energy
technologies available today, costing between 4 and 6 cents per kilowatt-hour,
depending upon the wind resource and project financing of the particular
project.”
Purzuelo
said the Philippines, as the rest of the world, has many options where to source
the electricity needed by industries and people. But for him, it’s best to
pick the “power of the wind. It’s free, safe, clean, sustainable and
renewable.”