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Advocates call for power sector reform

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BY GILBERT P. BAYORAN

Hundreds of clean energy advocates and representatives of labor, youth, and consumer groups marched together on November 24 to decry current policies and systems in the power sector that promote destructive and costly energy while failing to protect the interests of consumers and ordinary Filipinos.

The groups, led by Konsyumer Negros, Bukluran ng Manggagawang Pilipino (BMP), Partido Lakas ng Masa (PLM), Sanlakas, and think-tank Center for Energy, Ecology, and Development (CEED), said it is high time to scrutinize how the Electric Power Industry Reform Act (EPIRA) shaped the power sector, and put forward energy development directions that will empower end-users while advancing sustainability and affordability of electricity.

“Two decades of EPIRA brought us nowhere near its promise of healthy competition among private players and least-cost electricity for consumers. Instead, we find ourselves struggling to pay bills while having little to no say in processes that determine the kind and cost of electricity we get, which today is increasingly expensive and largely taken from dirty energy sources like coal and gas that cause suffering to communities while also destroying the climate and environment. We will not stand idly by when we know far better alternatives in the form of renewables can be made available to us,” Griderick Alila, coordinator of Konsyumer Negros said in a press statement issued by the group.

The march also called for the advance of workers’ rights, which the groups said will be assisted by a swift and just transition to clean energy and people-centered reforms in the power sector.

“Because of COVID-19, workers across Negros and the Philippines today are heavily burdened not only by limited or lost livelihood, but also increasing costs of basic necessities. As we seek to move forward from this crisis towards a new normal where workers and ordinary Filipinos are far more empowered, part and parcel of our recovery plans should be tapping renewable energy sources that can create much needed green jobs and supply affordable and reliable electricity in the long-term,” presidential aspirant Leody De Guzman, who also chairs the BMP, said.

The march was followed by a People’s Power Assembly, which featured the launch of a five-point agenda on democratizing the energy and power industry; the need to overhaul EPIRA; taking action for climate and displacing fossil fuels; transitioning to renewables for a green recovery and a more sustainable future; and ensuring access to affordable electricity for all.*

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