By
JUANCHO R. MAHUSAY
CALAPAN CITY – A consortium of five foreign
firms will reportedly start drilling natural gas in the southern part of the
two provinces in Mindoro Island in the second quarter of next year, the
Department of Energy relayed this good news to the provincial government of
Oriental Mindoro here.
Accordingly, huge oil and gas seeps were
discovered indicated on Mindoro Island, adjacent to the Palawan Basin, which
hosts all the producing oil and gas wells in the Philippines.
The gas drilling is said to be scheduled in
the towns of Roxas, Mansalay and Bulalacao in Oriental Mindoro province, and in
Magsaysay, San Jose, and Sablayan municipalities in Occidental Mindoro.
The operations will begin shortly, according
to the news bulletin released by the United Kingdom-based Pitkin Petroleum
(Philippines) Plc, the main operator of Service Contract 53, which was approved
by the DoE on July 8, 2005 in favor of a consortium of Pitkin, Resource
Management Association (Hongkong) Ltd., The Philodrill Corp., Anglo-Philippine
Holdings Corp., and Basic Energy Corp.
Energy Undersecretary Jose Layug was
reportedly pleased over the prospects in Mindoro Island. He stated
that the service contract area coverage for the said particular prospect is
724,000 hectares and added the exploration period covers seven years
(started in 2005) with different sub-phases.
Pitkin Petroleum on the other hand said
"numerous onshore oil and gas seeps plus two gas discoveries are located
in the contract area and more than 15 prospective structures with individual
areas of closure of between seven and 65 square kilometers have been identified
from previous work."
The firm has a participating interest of 70
percent in the block, with the remaining 30 percent held by the Philodrill
Corp. Basic Consolidated Inc. and Anglo-Philippine Holdings Corp.
Oriental Mindoro First District Congressman
Rodolfo Valencia welcomed the move, noting it will further bring economic boom
to the already developing province.
He said the National Grid and Transmission
Corporation has approved the Batangas-Mindoro Submarine Interconnection Project
worth ₱11 billion.
The underwater link aims to convey surplus
electric power from Mindoro Grid to Luzon.
Layug said the agency is not only focusing
its exploration works on the traditional energy sources, such as oil and gas,
in Mindoro Island, but also on renewable sources of energy, such as geothermal,
wind, and hydro power.
Last March, this year, President Benigno C.
Aquino III led the switch-on ceremony of Mindoro Island’s first
hydro-power plant in Brgy. Linaw-Kawayan, in San Teodoro municipality, Oriental
Mindoro.
Now operational, the mini-hydro, with a
construction cost of ₱405 million borrowed from the Development Bank of the
Philippines (DBP), is capable of producing 4.5 megawatts of electricity.
The groundbreaking and construction of the
country's second wind power projects, the province's second renewable energy
project, was undertaken last September 7.
Situated on a 1,296-hectare mountain village
overlooking the scenic beach resorts of the Verde Island Passage, the
three-48-megawatt wind farm costs P6-billion.
The construction of the first phase, capable
of generating 16 megawatts of electricity and costing P2 billion,
has been targeted to last in two years in 2014.
The first operating wind farm facility is in
Bangui, Ilocos Norte, with 20 units of wind mills capable of generating 33
megawatts of electricity. Each unit stands 70-meter high, and blade diameter of
41 meters each.
The Bangui wind farm was originally designed
to only produce clean electricity without emitting carbon, people call them as
"giant electric fans" that have become a major tourist destination in
Northern Luzon.
The Puerto Galera wind project is a component
of the Power Development Program of Oriental Mindoro supported by the
Provincial Development Council (PDC).
-- 30 --
No comments:
Post a Comment