Firm uses solar rooftops to help farmers reduce costs | Inquirer Business

Firm uses solar rooftops to help farmers reduce costs

/ 05:14 AM October 10, 2019

Menlo Renewable Energy Corp. (MREN), a wholly owned subsidiary of MRC Allied Inc., has switched on a 550-kilowatt rooftop solar photovoltaic project for a rice mill in Northern Luzon.

MRC Allied said in a statement this was MREN’s pilot project for its Solar PV Portfolio, thus bringing the company closer to its goal of becoming a major renewable energy player in the Philippines.

The parent firm said this project would make renewable energy technology accessible to other industries such as the agricultural sector.

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The installation would complement the peaking power needs of the unnamed rice mill and would help reduce power costs by about 30 percent.

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Lower expenses for electricity would also translate to lower prices of milled rice.

“We have finally kicked off our [renewable energy] portfolio through this pilot project and we are working hard to produce more through our [renewable energy] subsidiary, MREN,” MRC Allied president Augusto Cosio said.

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Cosio said the pilot project was realized in less than a year. He said he was looking forward to the inauguration of more projects in the future.

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MRC Allied earlier said it was racking up in the next two years a portfolio of solar rooftop projects with a total of 12 megawatts in power generation capacity.

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In the fourth quarter of 2018, MRC said it also broke ground for a 550-kW rooftop project at a rice mill in Nueva Ecija as well as two other rice mills, in addition to a similar project with a mall operator in Davao Oriental.

Aside from solar rooftops, MRC Allied planned to continue utility-scale projects such as the 50-MW solar project of Sulu Electric Power and Light Philippines Inc. where it had  a 15-percent stake as well as its own 100-MW solar project in Pampanga and 60-MW solar project in Cebu. —RONNEL W. DOMINGO

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