Energy poverty can kill today, not 30 or 100 years from now because of “man-made” warming or climate change. Dark streets at night because of expensive electricity and unstable energy mean more road accidents, more crimes. Or households using candles are courting more fires, more destruction to private property. And households using traditional biomass for cooking endure indoor pollution and invite various respiratory diseases.
Thus, it is unwise for governments to institute measures
that will make electricity even more expensive and make the construction of
power plants become more costly and bureaucratic. Depriving the people of more
access to cheaper electricity and stable energy sources is violation of their
human rights, the right to live in safe communities, and road travel at night,
the right to productive work and studies, the right to entertainment with
families and friends, anytime they like.
Consider the following data on energy poverty in the
ASEAN from the International Energy Agency (IEA) and the Economic Research
Institute for ASEAN and East Asia (ERIA). We exclude Brunei and Singapore in
this list because they have 100% provision of energy for their people (see
table).
In 2013, some 21 million Filipinos were still using
candles or noisy gensets at night, consuming more diesel, another fossil fuel.
And some 53 million Filipinos were still using firewood and charcoal (meaning
more illegal cutting of trees) for cooking, or cow dung, causing more indoor
pollution and respiratory/health problems later.
Is this a good situation for the country and our people?
Maybe if one advocates de-industrialization and low standard of living as much
as possible, the answer is yes.
The Philippine government through the Climate Change
Commission (CCC) submitted to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change
meeting in Paris last year this Intended Nationally Determined Contributions
(INDCs) to reduce greenhouse gas (GHG):
“The Philippines intends to undertake GHG (CO2e)
emissions reduction of about 70% by 2030 relative to its BAU scenario of
2000-2030. Reduction of CO2e emissions will come from energy, transport, waste,
forestry and industry sectors.”
This means that we should cut our carbon dioxide (CO2)
emissions by 70% compared to a business as usual (BAU) scenario.
How will several industries be adversely affected? Mainly
through more expensive electricity as more expensive, subsidy-dependent renewables
like wind and solar will be forced-fed into the grid and distribution
utilities. Even if cheaper electricity from coal and natural gas plants are
available, they will be second priority when power from intermittent but
expensive sources are available. So our monthly electricity bills will keep
rising.
Also, more electric tricycles and jeeps will be fielded
via tax-funded programs, like the ADB loan of $300 million (around P17.2
billion) for 100,000 new e-trikes in the country. Purchase of e-trikes is borne
by taxpayers, their daily electricity charging is also borne by taxpayers via
charging stations in municipal/city halls.
And firms will be forced to procure more
capital-intensive processes, meaning higher operational costs to be passed on
to consumers in the form of higher prices of goods and services.
The Philippine Chamber of Commerce and Industry (PCCI)
early this month wrote to the CCC questioning that commitment of a high target,
70% GHG emissions by 2030 as this will put undue pressure on local industries
and strain the growth of the economy. The PCCI said, it supports GHG emission
reduction but that “high target” is impractical. Their proposal was 40%
reduction.
Good call by the PCCI. Expensive energy, costly prices of
commodities and services, should be among the last things that we should aspire
for our people.
Those alarmist scenario of “more severe weather”,
“unprecedented, unequivocal global warming” and catastrophic “man-made” climate
change remain questionable. Climate changes from warming to cooling to warming
to cooling, in natural and endless cycles, since the planet was created some
4.6 billion years ago. Consider this data for instance (see chart).
The big or very strong El Niño of 2015-2016 has a
precedent, the big El Niño of 1997-1998. And almost always, big El Niño is
followed by big La Niña, see the early ’70s cooling and the prolonged La Niña
from 1998-2000.
Continued demonization of CO2 -- a useful gas that we
humans and our animals exhale, the gas that our plants, trees, and crops use to
produce their own food via photosynthesis -- is creating more distortions in
energy and economic policies.
We should not aspire to rival Myanmar and Cambodia, much
less North Korea, in energy poverty. Government -- through the CCC and DENR
especially -- should get out of overly ambitious alarmism in energy rationing.
This subject was not highlighted in the recent
Presidential elections but President-elect Rodrigo Duterte was quoted in one
forum during the campaign period that he supports more coal power plants to
sustain the country’s rising energy needs. Let us hope that he will stick to
this policy.
Bienvenido S. Oplas, Jr. is the head of Minimal
Government Thinkers, a Fellow of SEANET and Stratbase-ADRi. minimalgovernment@gmail.com
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See also:
BWorld 39, Coal and renewables complement each other, January 26, 2016
BWorld 55, FIT-All, renewables and elections 2016, April 23, 2016
BWorld 56, Thomas Hobbes, Saul Alinsky and Duterte, April 30, 2016
BWorld 57, Eric Hoffer, Machiavelli and Duterte, May 06, 2016
Energy 65, World Bank's anti-coal drama, May 08, 2016
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