EU project energizes 100 homes in Davao Occ

By Allan Nawal

November 11, 2018, 5:24 pm

DAVAO CITY – At least 100 homes in two communities in Davao Occidental have been energized. Thanks to a European Union project that aims to provide power to off-grid communities through the use of solar technology.

Enrico Strampelli, head of the EU Development Cooperation, during the switch-on ceremony in Digos City in Davao del Sur on Thursday, said the energization of sitios New Mabuhay in Malita and Mahayag in Don Marcelino, both in Davao Occidental, is part of the EU's €60 million (P3.6 billion) Access to Sustainable Energy Programme (ASEP) for remote communities in the Philippines.

Strampelli said the program highlights the productive use of renewable energy for increased income generation in the recipient rural communities.

For example, in New Mabuhay, the solar power electrification project now also powers two units of abaca spindle machines, which were installed to help residents process their abaca.

This demonstrated additional economic opportunities through renewable energy, he said.

Davao Occidental Gov. Claude Bautista said the project spelled a lot of difference in the lives of the recipient residents.

For example, he said New Mabuhay in Barangay Little Baguio in Malita was so remote that the local power cooperative had difficulty putting up power lines there.

The lack of power, he said, stalled economic development in the area.

The installation of the solar system is hoped to improve the lives of the recipient communities, he added.

Energy Undersecretary Felix William Fuentebella said residents of the two communities were only among the 100,000 households in Mindanao and Bohol in the Visayas that the EU and the national government had planned to energize through the off-grid technology using photovoltaic power.

Fuentebella said the program aimed to install solar home systems, each with a 50-watt peak capacity, in recipient homes.

“Rest assured, the DOE and our partners-stakeholders will continue to explore more projects that will benefit our brothers and sisters in remote areas through innovative solutions,” he said.

In a statement, Energy Undersecretary Jesus Cristino Posadas said “there is a close correlation between energy, particularly electricity and social and economic development as being energy-poor is poverty-bound.”

“Most of the poorest of the poor are located in remote and far-flung areas which are not connected to the main grids of Luzon, Visayas and Mindanao –the so-called off-grid areas,” he said.

“Energizing these power-poor areas will enable economic and social activities to be started and be sustained there,” Posadas added.

He said in off-grid areas, residents have to resort to the use of expensive energy sources just to keep things going, such as diesel generators.

Posadas said many economic activities need energy, including corn shelling, rice hulling, and in the case of New Mabuhay, abaca processing. (PNA)

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