Global Green Power PLC Corporation is a Philippine Company that develops BIOMASS grid connected, decentralized, renewable energy power plants utilizing sustainable biomass resources such as agricultural crop and food processing wastes.

2010 Mar 24 EPC & Technology contracts signing ceremony

GGPC subsidiary companies sign EPC and Technology contracts in a ceremony attended by the British, Chinese and Finnish Ambassadors, other dignitaries, senior banking and institutional executives.

2010 Mar 24 EPC & Technology contracts signing ceremony

2010 Jul. 14 Banks visit to GPPPI site

Green Power Panay Philippines Inc. 17.5 MW Multi-fuel Biomass Power Plant site was visited by several banks officers.

2010 Jul. 14 Banks visit to GPPPI site

2010 Aug. 19 GGPC/GBC Office in Ortigas, Manila

Global Green Power PLC Corporation and Global Biomass PLC Corporation Key People.

2010 Aug. 19 GGPC/GBC Office in Ortigas, Manila

2009 Dec. 16 GPNEPI Groundbreaking Ceremony

Barangay Tabuating, Municipality of San Leonardo, Province of Nueva Ecija, Luzon region, Philippines.

2009 Dec. 16 GPNEPI Groundbreaking Ceremony

2009 May 02 GPPPI Groundbreaking Ceremony

Barangay Cabalabaguan, Municipality of Mina, Province of Iloilo, Western Visayas region, Philippines.

2009 May 02 GPPPI Groundbreaking Ceremony

2009 Apr. 9 POYRY joins GGPC as Owner's Engineers

Richard Pinnock Exec. Vice Pres., Energy Business Group; David de Montaigne, President of Global Green Power PLC; Andy Bachofen, Project Manager and Peter Heinzelmann, Managing Director.

2009 Apr. 9 POYRY  joins GGPC as Owner's Engineers

GPPPI Power Plant Site Location

Construction of access road is undergoing to facilitate the transport to the Power Plant site.

GPPPI Power Plant  Site Location

2010 Feb. 19 Renewable Energy Contract Signing at DOE

Department of Energy Secretary, The Honorable Angelo T. Reyes; Mr. David de Montaigne, President of Global Green Power PLC and Department of Energy Undersecretary, Mrs. Loreta G. Ayson.

2010 Feb. 19 Renewable Energy Contract Signing at DOE

2010 January GGPC-POYRY EPC Contract Meeting

Engineering Procurement and Construction contract meeting between Global Green Power PLC Corporation and POYRY Energy Inc. at GGPC's office in Ortigas, Manila.

2010 January GGPC-POYRY EPC Contract Meeting

GPPPI Power Plant Site Location

Construction of access road is undergoing to facilitate the transport to the Power Plant site.

GPPPI Power Plant  Site Location
24 MARCH 2010 - GGPC subsidiary companies sign EPC and Technology contracts for two 17.5 MW Multifuel Biomass Power Plants and a Letter of Intent for a third 35 MW unit for the Philippines.
16 MARCH 2010 Dragon Power enters RMB 28 Billion (USD 4.1 Billion) strategic cooperation agreement with the China Construction Bank
16 DECEMBER 2009 Green Power Nueva Ecija Groundbreaking Ceremony at San Leonardo
1 DECEMBER 2009 Steve Waterfield joins GGP Group as Director and Chief-Executive Officer
30 SEPTEMBER 2009 UK Ambassador Lillie and DOE Undersecretary Santos fly to Iloilo City to support & endorse GPPPI 17.5 MW Biomass Power Plant
28 JULY 2009 GGPC issues Request for Offers for Panay Civil Works
14 JULY 2009 GGPC issues Request for Offers for Panay and Nueva Ecija TURBINE Islands
6 JULY 2009 Green Power Panay issued ECC (Environmental Compliance Certificate) 35MW Biomass Power
6 JULY 2009 GGPC issues Request for Offers for Panay and Nueva Ecija BOILER Islands
20 MAY 2009 Green Power Panay and Nueva Ecija commence key equipment bidding process
7 MAY 2009 Green Power Pangasinan awarded Board of Investment ("BOI") incentives for 35MW biomass
2 MAY 2009 Green Power Panay Groundbreaking Ceremony at Mina
9 APRIL 2009 GGP sign contract with Poyry Energy for Panay & Nueva Ecija Biomass Power Plants
15 MARCH 2009 GPPPI/GPNEPI Environmental Compliance Certificate approved up to 35 MWe
10 MARCH 2009 GGP Project Companies receive full DOE Endorsement:
16 DECEMBER 2008 Green Power Panay Philippines Inc (GPPPI) signed 25-year Electricity Supply Agreements:
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24 JULY 2010

ERC - Subsidy for RE via feed-in-tariff stretched to 20 years

The subsidy to be borne by consumers via the feed-in-tariff (FIT) component to be reflected in the electric bills for emerging renewable energy (RE) technologies will be stretched to 20 years, according to the rules issued by the Energy Regulatory Commission (ERC).

The initial proposal will be to incorporate peso-per kilowatt hour FIT Allowance (FIT All) as a charge in the electric bills for initially 12 years, then changed to 15 years, but this was stretched longer so the resulting levelized cost to end-users will be lower.

“Eligible RE plants shall be entitled to the applicable FITs to them for a period of 20 years,” the ERC rules specified, noting that for the period beyond that, operations for mature RE projects shall already be anchored on market prices.

There have also been provisions for review on the FIT system, especially for generation facilities already reaching or surpassing 12 years of operations.

The calculated feed-in-tariff across technologies will range from P7.00 to P25 per kWh (with solar technology seen bearing the highest FIT; while wind will be at a median of P12-P15 per kWh). Nevertheless, the ERC rules prescribe that the National Renewable Energy Board (NREB) will need to file a levelized FIT, computed from the estimates for various RE resources.

When approved by the regulator, system operator National Grid Corporation of the Philippines (NGCP) will bill it to its load customers, and the distribution utilities will in turn reflect it as separate item in the electricity bills.

While the FIT is an incentive package set for project developers under the RE Law, this is generally considered a form of subsidy but coming directly from the pocket of consumers channeled through the electric bills.

Qualified to avail of the feed-in-tariff, aside from wind and solar, would be project developers in biomass, waste-to-energy facilities, ocean/tidal current, run-of-river hydros and specified hybrid systems; while exclusions were given to base-load capable impounding hydros and geothermal facilities.

To avail of the incentive, the ERC rules emphasized that “all such RE plants shall be deemed eligible upon issuance of a COC (certificate of compliance) authorizing them to operate as FIT-eligible RE plants.”

The FIT, as the regulator prescribed, shall be technology specific and such must be differentiated based on the size of the eligible RE plant, and as recommended by the NREB.

 

Read article source in Manila Bulletin Publishing Corporation, July 24, 2010

 
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