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BICAM APPROVES ENERGY EFFICIENCY AND CONSERVATION ACT – GATCHALIAN

The Bicameral Conference Committee has approved the reconciled Senate and House versions of a measure institutionalizing a framework to advance energy efficiency and conservation practices in the country.

Senator Win Gatchalian said the approval of the reconciled version of Senate Bill No. 1531 and House Bill No. 8629, more popularly known as the Energy Efficiency and Conservation Act is quite timely, especially at a time when the Philippines is experiencing sustained economic growth over pass years.

The Senate Committee on Energy, chaired by Gatchalian, and the House Committee on Energy, chaired by Rep. Lord Allan Velasco, have agreed to adopt SB No. 1531 as the base of the reconciled bill.

“This bill is quite important in terms of growing our economy because we all know we need a lot of power supply in the next few years, but the power supply will not come in as a form of physical plants, that power supply can come in the form of savings. Dahil kung nagse-save po tayo, hindi na rin nating kailangan magtayo ng bagong planta,” the chairman of the Senate Committee on Energy and principal sponsor of the measure in the Senate said.

“This bill is quite important in terms of growing our economy because we all know we need a lot of power supply in the next few years.”

“With this in mind, I’m very excited that both the Senate and House panels have a general meeting of minds of approving this bill,” the legislator added.

Sharing a tiny bit of history at the start of the Bicameral Committee hearing, the lawmaker pointed out that Congress had been trying to pass such measure since the idea was brought up in the 8th Congress in 1988 but to no avail.

This made the Philippines the only ASEAN country with no law encouraging the efficient utilization of energy while providing tax incentives for energy-efficient projects until now, according to the senator.

In a nutshell, SBN 1531 mandates the creation of a National Energy Efficiency and Conservation Plan that defines national targets, details feasible strategies, and imposes a regular monitoring and evaluation system.

Alongside this will be the development and maintenance of a National Energy Efficiency and Conservation Database, where relevant information about energy consumption as well as the application of energy efficient and renewable energy technologies shall be centrally stored.

The measure would also institutionalize these energy efficiency and conservation standards and strategies in local governance through the creation of a Local Energy Efficiency and Conservation Plan and the inclusion of Guidelines on Energy Conserving Design on Buildings in the issuance of building permits. To further encourage complete compliance to the energy standards to be proposed, the senator added that the measure would include incentives as well as technical assistance from government agencies.

The bill would also create an Inter-Agency Energy Efficiency and Conservation Committee that will be tasked to provide strategic direction in the implementation of the Government Energy Management Program (GEMP), a program to reduce monthly consumption of electricity and petroleum products by the government.

The EU Access to Sustainable Energy Programme estimates that a 10 percent improvement in efficiency will save the country P55.5 billion which translates to a P140 monthly savings in the monthly electricity bill of the average household, or about P1,680 per year. The World Bank also reports that government energy efficiency projects can save the government P3.4 billion per year.

Aside from electricity cost savings, Gatchalian added that energy efficiency would also result in reduced dependency on foreign coal, avoiding some 290.2 million metric tons in imports over a 12-year period. This would result in average annual savings of $392 million to $1.3 billion between 2018 to 2030 at the 50 percent and 100 percent efficiency standards, respectively.

“Energy efficiency would also result in reduced dependency on foreign coal.”

“Energy efficiency and conservation strategies will not only achieve much needed savings for the government, but it can also significantly bring down the prices of electricity and give consumers extra money in their pockets to spend for other basic necessities,” Gatchalian said.

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