MINERVA BC NEWMAN
CEBU CITY – Solar Philippines CEO Leandro Leviste, in a digital Asian Power Summit on April 20-21, in Singapore claimed that the country is the most ‘fundamentally attractive’ solar market in South East Asia (SEA) due to its power generation costs that are even double compared to its neighboring countries.
“It really behooves us to focus on saturating our home grid with solar energy and just branching out to other markets, once the power prices in the Philippines have been saturated with an influx of solar,” he added.
In the pipeline, Leviste said is a joint venture between Solar Philippines and Medco Energi for a 20-year power purchase agreement with Indonesia’s state utility PLN for a 50-megawatt solar project signed in March this year.
Last December, Solar Philippines subsidiary, Solar Philippines Nueva Ecija Corporation, was listed at the Philippine Stock Exchange and is now planning to develop 10GW of solar projects which can start construction in the next few years.
“This is a model of being a project developer that partners with other independent power producers (IPPs) because we won't be able to achieve these capacity targets by ourselves. We will not be able to persuade the industry, if, as a company, we're trying to do it all by ourselves,” Leviste bared.
It is important to think that the mainstream power providers are convinced of solar themselves and hopefully this way, the whole Philippine power industry will support an accelerated renewable energy transition for this 10-gigawatt target that Solar Philippines laid out, he added.
This will also contribute to the Philippine DOE target of having 35 percent of the country’s energy mix as renewables by 2030, 20GW of which will be solar.
Leviste said, the government has already plenty of policies that support the development of solar in the country to reach its 2030 target. One of which includes DOE-led auctions for solar development. “It's really the private sector that is lagging in terms of implementing the sufficient supply to meet the demand that has been set by these policies,” he added.
Leviste bared that in the last two to three years, costs have become competitive in both the peaking capacity requirements in the country and with storage for some of the evening requirements.
Demand is expected to rise but the supply will be constrained because of the scarcity of land, especially in the Greater Manila Area where much of the demand comes from, he said.
That is what the company is focused on solving, Leviste said and not only developing projects for its own use but also to help the existing power companies of the Philippines more easily get into solar by rolling out projects in partnership with them.
Hopefully, that way, the Philippines can become a forerunner for large scale solar with storage at the gigawatt scale in Southeast Asia. Leviste also said that the Philippines has potential for large-scale battery deployment, as some other power companies in the country are implementing the largest capacity of battery storage for ancillary service requirements in the grid, citing conglomerate San Miguel Corporation’s 1000MW battery storage project.
Same as how the country is often the “early adopter” of new technologies such as for solar and battery for ancillary, it will also be an early adopter for batteries for energy shifting, the CEO said.
“When we talk about these gigawatts of solar, that's not going to be solar on a standalone basis, it's going to be solar that will need to have batteries so that the grid will be able to absorb this large capacity,” he added.
For the part of Solar Philippines, Leviste said that it would just be importing batteries wherever it costs the least instead of manufacturing its own as the company already has a lot of ongoing projects. (Photos: Solar Philippines/Google Images)
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