Clean energy advocates and coal-affected communities under the banner of the Power for People Coalition have urged the Department of Energy to use its announced moratorium on new coal plants to clear out the Philippines’ coal pipeline and make way for a swift transition to clean energy sources as an appropriate response to the worsening climate crisis.
In a letter request filed at the DoE head office in Taguig City, they asked the department to issue an updated list of generation companies that have been endorsed as of Oct. 27; a written moratorium order on endorsements to all pipeline coal projects; and a written order revoking endorsements already issued to pipeline coal projects.
Referring to the recent devastation caused by a series of tropical cyclones in the country, the letter said: “While we are facing the consequences of years of climate inaction and unaccountability, it is not too late to prevent a turn for the worse. This is why communities resisting proposed coal projects in their hometowns and the Power for People Coalition celebrate your Honorable Office’s announcement of a moratorium on endorsements for greenfield coal power plants.”
Coal has been under fire globally for being the single biggest contributor to greenhouse gas emissions that trigger climate change, with advanced nations and major international companies already taking strides to abandon coal.
“We have said over and over that coal fuels disasters, and for once, the DoE has made an effort to stop shoving in more coal into the climate furnace. This is a first step, and P4P and the communities that have been suffering from coal for so long would see to it that the DoE stays on the right path. This moratorium must block off no less than all coal projects in the national pipeline, and herald the beginning of the country’s coal phaseout,” said Gerry Arances, convenor of P4P.