IPS / Jed Alegado
MANILA—Renewable energy is now being seen by many people around the world as a cost-effective development solution, both for developed and developing nations. Countries have slowly been realizing that the use of coal and the huge amount of carbon emissions it generates harms the environment and impacts our daily activities.
In fact, according to Christine Lins, executive secretary of the Renewable Energy Network for the 21st Century, “last year, for the first time in 40 years, economic and emissions growth have decoupled.”
“If you look back 10 years ago, renewable energies were providing 3 per cent of global energy, and now they provide something close to 22 percent, so that has really skyrocketed,” Lins noted.
This is being led most obviously by countries like Uruguay, which aims to generate 90 percent of its electricity from renewable sources by 2015; and Costa Rica, which maintained 100-percent renewable-energy generation for the first 100 days of this year.
These countries are not alone and are fast becoming the norm rather than the “alternative.” Even small developing countries, such as Burundi, Jordan and Kenya, are leading the world in investments in renewable energies as a percentage of gross domestic product.
In 2008 the Philippines has enacted the Renewable Energy Act of 2008, aiming to “increase the utilization of renewable energy by institutionalizing the development of national and local capabilities in the use of renewable-energy system…and reduce the country’s dependence on fossil fuels.”
However, after seven years of its implementation, the Philippines hasn’t yet fully maximized the use of renewable energy, according to Advocates of Science and Technology for the People (Agham), a non-governmental organization based in the Philippines promoting the use of local science and technology practices.
Recently, the Philippine government gave the go-ahead for the construction of 21 coal-powered projects despite President Aquino’s promise in 2011 during the launch of the Philippine government’s National Renewable Energy Plan to “nearly triple the country’s renewables-based capacity from around 5,400 megawatt (MW) in 2010 to 15,300 MW in 2030.”
In the next five years, the new coal plants that are expected to be constructed are the following: the Aboitiz company Therma South Inc.’s 300-MW plant in Davao City (2016); the 400-MW expansion of Team Energy’s Pagbilao coal-fired power plant in Quezon (2017); the 600-MW Redondo Peninsula Energy Inc. plant in Subic, Zambales (2018); the San Miguel Corp. Global’s 300-MW plant in Davao (2017); and a 600-MW plant
in Bataan (2016).
While the government has provided incentives to companies to make use of renewable energy, the private sector is not keen on doing so because of the profit generated by coal. Furthermore, they are also looking at the short-term gain of using it—the relatively cheaper price of harnessing the so-called dirty energy.
A report, titled “Powering Up Against Poverty: Why Renewable Energy is the Future,” released last week by the international development organization Oxfam argues that renewable energy is, in fact, a more affordable-energy source than coal for poor people in deve-loping countries.
The report argues that, as a result of the changing energy landscape around the world, the decreasing price of renewable energies, and the often remote location of the majority of people who don’t have access to electricity, renewable energy may actually offer a more reliable and effective energy source.
Furthermore, the report stated that, “Four out of five people without electricity live in rural areas that are often not connected to a centralized-energy grid, so local, renewable-energy solutions offer a much more affordable, practical and healthy solution than coal.”
“But, as well as failing to improve energy access for the world’s poorest people, burning coal contributes to hundreds of thousands of premature deaths each year due to air pollution, and is the single biggest contributor to climate change.”
This supports statements made this year by the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund and former United Nations chief Kofi Annan, who have all argued that renewable energy and not fossil fuels are key to improving energy access and reducing inequality, especially in developing countries.
If the Philippines wants to show to the world that our country is the rallying point against climate change, especially in the global climate talks, our government needs to walk the talk on renewable energy. Indeed, climate-adaptation practices are not enough. We need to show other countries and lead the way toward climate-change mitigation by leading the path to sustainable development and use of renewable energy.
Similarly, countries under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change Conference of the Parties must agree on a fair and legally binding agreement in Paris in December. We cannot afford another failed climate negotiations, like the one in Copenhagen in 2009, to
happen again.
Jed Alegado (@jedalegado) is a climate campaigner based in the Philippines. He holds a master’s degree in Public Management from the Ateneo School of Government and is also one of the climate trackers for Adopt a Negotiator’s
#Call4Climate campaign.