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Power
need for Panglao Airport tackled
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| PANGLAO
AIRPORT UPDATE. NAPOCOR Senior VP Silvano Zanoria
(l) updates Gov. Erico Aumentado who presides the 27th
meeting of the Panglao Island Tourism Estate Inter-Agency
Task Force held at the Villa Alzhun Inn & Restaurant
last Friday. Foto DANNY REYES |
Bohol
has excess power now, but unless new sources are tapped, a
shortage looms in as early as three years.
Gov. Erico Aumentado who chairs the Panglao Island Tourism
Estate Inter-Agency Task Force (PITE-IATF) Friday invited
top officials of the National Power Corp.
(NAPOCOR)
and the National Transmission Corp. (TRANSCO) to give the
lowdown on their respective expansion plans vis-à-vis
the drastic need for power when the Panglao Bohol International
Airport (PBIA) operationalizes in 2011.
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"With
the present production, Bohol is in for a serious problem
when, aside from the operationalization of the airport,
the big tourism industry players like the Bohol Regency
Hotel and two Korean investors come in next year, not
to mention the expansion of the Bohol Beach Club and
other establishments," Aumentado said.
The
airport alone needs 20 megawatts (MW). The Bohol Regency
Hotel that straddles Dauis and Panglao towns and starts
construction in June 2008 will need power for its 250-300
rooms plus other facilities and amenities. The Koreans
will invest in hotels, resorts, spas and golf courses,
too, he bared.
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NAPOCOR
Senior Vice President Silvano Zanoria who flew in from Manila
that day reported
that Bohol's nighttime power demand today stands at 58 MW.
He
pegs the production of the Bohol Diesel Power Plant (BDPP)
at 18 MW, the Loboc Hydroelectric Plant at 1.2 MW, the Janopol
Hydroelectric Plant at 2.5 MW for a sub-total of 21.7 MW.
The
Leyte Bohol Interconnection Project (LBIP) contributes a maximum
of 100 MW for a total of 121.7 MW. Less the forecast peak
demand of 58 MW, the maximum reserve stands at 63.7 MW. Deducting
the maintenance reserve, however, leaves a net reserve of
only 50.96 MW.
Given
the increasing demand, Zanoria said an immediate solution
NAPOCOR can offer is the transfer to Bohol of land-based generating
sets from Subic in Olongapo City capable of at least 160 MW.
Aside
from attending the PITE meeting, Zanoria said he was to inspect
that afternoon the foundation for the generating sets at the
BDPP in Dampas District in Tagbilaran City.
On
the other hand, Vice President Dominador Geonzon of TRANSCO
reported that the company's upgrading project will make more
reliable whatever power NAPOCOR produces. TRANSCO takes charge
of the transmission of the power generated by NAPOCOR.
Up
in TRANSCO's plans is the Bohol Backbone Transmission Project.
Stage 1 comprises the stringing of a 138 KV transmission line
from Ubay to Corella through high-tension steel towers. Being
taller than coconut palms and most trees, trip offs will no
longer be a problem because falling fronds, branches and other
debris can no longer straddle the cables. A 69 KV tie line
will also be installed from Dampas to Catigbian town.
On
the other hand, an expansion substation will be constructed
in Ubay and a new one in Corella.
At
2006 price levels, the project is estimated to cost almost
P.4 billion. The feasibility study was completed last April
and approved by the Management Committee two months later.
The project is now for endorsement to the National Economic
and Development Authority Infrastructure Coordination Committee
(NEDA ICC).
Meanwhile,
the governor announced the interest expressed by Hanjin Heavy
Industries and Construction Co., Ltd. to establish a shipyard
in Bohol. In his meeting with Hanjin President and Chief Executive
Officer Kang-Rock Lee at his head office in South Korea last
October, the latter said such facility would require at least
200 MW of power and at least 30,000 welders, among others.
As
such, the PITE-IATF passed two resolutions - requesting President
Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, TRANSCO and NAPOCOR to upgrade LBIP
by tapping another geothermal power plant, this time in Southern
Leyte, and requesting President Arroyo and NAPOCOR President
del Callar to transfer to Bohol the excess power generator
from Subic.
Aumentado
is apprehensive with a coal-fired power plant. He said the
former governor of Pangasinan said such plant in Sual has
been wreaking havoc to the environment of the town and province.
He
does not want Bohol to be similarly affected.
"After
all, Bohol's tourism is based on ecology, culture and heritage,"
he said.
As
Panglao Island takes on a new face with the airport and verticals
(structures like hotels, etc.), some agricultural lands necessarily
need to be converted into residential, commercial or industrial.
To speed things up, the PITE-IATF also passed a resolution
requesting Agrarian Reform Secretary to authorize Region 7
Director Datu Yusoph Mama to approve the conversion of land
classification from five hectares to 100 hectares, but for
Panglao Island alone, which is Bohol's main thrust for tourism
and in the light of the international airport.
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