By Leilanie G. Adriano
Staff reporter
Laoag
City—Residents in Bangui, Ilocos Norte are
protesting the installation of transmission lines across their property from a
windmill farm, saying it was done without their consent.
The 69-kilometer transmission
lines will allow electricity generated by the 81-megawatt North Luzon Renewable
Energy Corp. (NLREC) windmill farm in Pagudpud to be transmitted to the Luzon
grid through Laoag City. NLREC is a joint venture of AC Energy Holdings Inc.,
UPC Renewables and Philippine Investment Alliance for Infrastructure.
NLREC began implementing the
first phase of the project in September along Brgys. Caparispisan and Balaoi.
This aims to double the production of the 32 wind turbines of the Bangui wind
power plant, also owned by Ayala Corp.
Endorsed by the Department of
Energy, the NLREC wind project was supposed to be online in June but has been
delayed by accessibility issues.
Several households in Brgys. Malasin,
Abaca and Dadaor in Bangui have complained that the transmission lines violated
their property rights and endangered their families.
“We are helpless and in
danger. The transmission line flies over our house and my son no longer wants
to stay indoors for fear of the high voltage power line once it is connected to
the grid,” said Renel Ancheta, a fisherman whose house stands near NLREC’s Tower
61.
Mr. Ancheta said his family
would have relocated had they been properly informed about the project. He
claimed that barangay officials tried to make him sign a document acknowledging
NLREC’s right of way through his land but he refused because the indemnification
fee was not even enough to pay for the foundation post of a new house.
No NLREC officials were
available to clarify the protests but lawyer Erme Labayog, provincial legal
officer and acting provincial assessor, said the transmission line project had
complied with safety and health standards, as well as rules prescribed by
building and electricity regulators.
NLREC president Wilfredo
Peñaflor assured the 18 families residing at Brgy. Malasin that they should not
fear the transmission lines, saying these were designed to withstand a typhoon
with winds of over 270 kilometers per hour.
“With respect to the
electromagnetic field (EMF) exposure or the so-called radiation, we wish to
clarify that the EMF produced by the transmission lines with the required
distances is well below the recommended long-term exposure levels prescribed by
the International Commission on Nonionizing Radiation Protection and adopted by
the Department of Health,” he said in an Oct. 29 letter to the families.
NLREC, however, may face a
lawsuit from US-based Bienvenida Sevilleja, according to lawyer Golda Arquillo.
“My client objected to the
installation of the transmission line. However, they still proceeded without
permission or without showing any court order that they are authorized to
install the transmission lines over my client’s property,” Ms. Arquillo said.
She said the Sevilleja family
intended to seek a court injunction to prevent NLREC from activating the lines.
She said her client received an offer to buy the lot but she refused.
“A person can’t be deprived
of his property rights without due process. They should have filed an
expropriation case and [could have] requested a writ of possession from the
court and not put up the lines over the objection of my client,” Ms. Arquillo added.
Bangui mayor Diosdado Garvida
said he had not seen any formal complaint against NLREC from any of the
families so he has not taken any action against the project.
“It would be hard for me to
meddle. There should at least be a private negotiation. If they can’t settle,
they should undergo the legal process,” Mr. Garvida said.
NLREC has committed P23.3
million worth of projects for its host communities for 2014 until 2016, 70
percent of which would benefit Pagudpud. The remaining 30 percent would be
divided among host villages traversed by the transmission lines.
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