SMC power unit eyes battery storage project sites for forestation

November 3, 2022, 4:41 pm

MANILA – Bolstering its climate action initiatives, San Miguel Corporation (SMC) power subsidiary SMC Global Power Holdings Corp. (SMCGP) reported the successful planting and growing of over five million new trees and mangroves from 2019 to date under its multi-year, nationwide forestation and carbon capture program. 
 
In a statement, the company said it is also expanding the scope of the project to reforest areas around its new Battery Energy Storage System (BESS) facilities –the first and largest such network in the Philippines and Southeast Asia. 
 
SMC president and chief executive officer Ramon Ang said as of October 2022, SMCGP’s “Project 747” initiative has yielded a total of 5,010,116 upland and mangrove trees across some 1,500 hectares of land.  
 
The project’s goal is to plant seven million trees on some 4,000 hectares of land in at least seven provinces. 
 
To date, SMCGP has planted in Albay, Bataan, Bulacan, Davao Occidental, Negros Occidental, Pangasinan, Quezon province, and Zambales. 
 
The list is, however, being expanded to cover areas where SMCGP’s battery storage facilities are installed or are being put up, including Albay, Bohol, Cagayan, Cebu, Davao del Norte, Davao de Oro, Isabela, Laguna, Leyte, Misamis Oriental, Pampanga, Pangasinan, and Tarlac. 
 
SMCGP is building a total of 31 BESS facilities with a total capacity of 1,000 megawatts. 
 
The battery facilities, which will minimize power wastage and redirect otherwise unused capacity to remote areas, are regarded as the best and most sustainable technical solution to the country’s power quality and reliability issues. They are seen to balance and improve access to power nationwide.  
 
They will make viable use of intermittent renewable sources, such as solar and wind by efficiently storing the energy for electricity when the sun is not shining or the wind is not blowing.  
 
Ang said foresting the areas around its new BESS facilities also makes sense because the facilities themselves are a major step to strengthening the entry of renewable energy capacities in the future. 
 
“The major challenge of renewable power everywhere in the world is intermittency. With renewables, the ability to generate power is always limited. You cannot generate solar power at nighttime, or when weather conditions block sunlight. You cannot produce wind power when there’s no wind. When there’s a drought, you also can’t produce hydropower. Battery storage is key to mitigating all these issues,” he said.  
 
Ang said the company thus has prioritized putting up the country’s first battery facilities and first and largest battery network to date. 
 
“It is key to enabling the use of more renewable capacities in the grid, and a critical part of our phased transition and expansion to cleaner and renewable power,” he added. 
 
Ang said SMCGP’s transition away from coal power towards cleaner liquefied natural gas power and renewable energy is pursued responsibly, “without compromising our developing economy’s growing need for reliable and affordable power, and while also continuing effort to bring basic electrification to the entire country.” (PR)
 

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