DOE scraps run-of-river hydro from GEA-3

DOE scraps run-of-river hydro from GEA-3

Solar firms urge DOE to speed up auctions

FILE PHOTO: Department of Energy (DOE) facade. Images from DOE / INQUIRER FILES

The Department of Energy (DOE) finally decided to drop the run-of-river (ROR), an energy technology originally included in the third round of green energy auction this year.

The agency said the move was “in view of the ongoing Feed-In-Tariff (FIT) System for ROR Hydro, which to date remains undersubscribed.”

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The Energy Regulatory Commission (ERC) said in December it could not yet issue the bid price for ROR given pending issues on policy matters.

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ERC chair and chief executive officer Monalisa Dimalanta said the commission was referring to the supposed “parallel implementation” of the FIT and Green Energy Auction Program (GEAP) for run-of-river hydro.

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FIT is another initiative meant to provide fixed rates to emerging clean power sources. GEAP, meanwhile, is designed to accelerate the transition to renewable energy.

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“We noted that there is still unsubscribed capacity for FIT for this technology yet there is additional capacity allocated for GEAP,” Dimalanta earlier said.

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In a briefing on Monday, the ERC official also confirmed this development.

“The DOE decided to retain it under the FIT so we will now sit down and discuss it as a revision to the FIT rate,” she added.

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Meanwhile, the DOE said it would conduct the auction proper in February, a delay from the initial target of conducting it within 2024.

The new round of clean power bidding will focus on geothermal, impounding hydro, and pumped-storage hydro.

“The administration of GEA-3, with the majority of the capacity coming from PSH (pumped-storage hydro), will pave the way for greater entry of RE energy in the grid’s energy mix, provide grid stability and reliability, foster a cleaner and more sustainable future, and at the same time ensure a transparent and competitive selection process of RE facilities,” the DOE said.

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The government has an ambitious target to scale up clean energy’s contribution in the power mix to 35 percent by 2030 from the current 22 percent.

TAGS: DoE, green energy

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