There is nothing definite yet about the revival of the Bataan Nuclear Power Plant (BNPP) while the $1 billion needed to activate the mothballed facility is not included in the 2017 budget, according to Sen. Loren Legarda.
Legarda, defending the budget of the Department of Energy (DOE) Thursday evening, said the proposal to use nuclear power still had to undergo an intensive study.
Energy Secretary Alfonso Cusi was just keeping an “open mind” about the idea of using nuclear power in the country, Legarda added.
Earlier reports said the President had allowed Cusi to proceed with plans to revive the BNPP, but also to pay special attention to safety and security aspects of the plant’s operation.
The DOE has created the Nuclear Energy Program Implementing Organization that would undertake a comprehensive study on the use of nuclear power, guided by the conditions listed by the International Atomic Energy Agency for developing a national infrastructure for nuclear power.
But quoting Cusi, Legarda said the energy secretary “had no clear direction from the President saying that opening BNPP is a clear priority.”
She said energy officials had realized that there were both political controversies and technical issues that might arise from the proposal to put the BNPP to work.
“So No. 1, it is not provided for in the 2017 budget. It will take intense studying and time to be able to answer whether this is a roadmap we want to take,” she said, under questioning from Sen. Sherwin Gatchalian.
Legarda also said it was difficult to determine when the study of the BNPP revival would be completed, pointing out that it would be a complex and technical process.
“[It is a] preliminary study and he is to convince all of us,” she added.
One of the things to be considered is the location of the facility near a fault line, which some said could make its operation dangerous for the Philippines. But there are those who say that the fault line was too far away to pose a threat.
Gatchalian, who chairs the Senate’s energy committee, pointed out that Vietnam had junked a 2,000-megawatt nuclear power plant project due to cost and safety concerns.
“With global sentiments over the nuclear source of energy, they were being cautious, so I think we should take note of that,” he added.