
MANILA (UCAN): Bishop Gerardo Alminaza of San Carlos, the Philippines, called on the government to abandon any ideas of pursuing nuclear power to help meet the country’s energy needs, saying the danger it poses far outweighs the benefits.
CBCP News reported the bishops as saying the disasters at Chernobyl, Fukushima and Three Mile Island show that nuclear power involves risks that are not worth taking.
“(They) are powerful albeit sorrowful reminders of the risks of nuclear power that we need not expose Filipinos to,” he said, adding that the disasters also occurred in countries that were more technologically advanced than the Philippines and were experienced in harnessing atomic energy.
Bishop Alminaza, a vocal advocate for renewable energy, was responding to reports that the president, Rodrigo Duterte, was weighing up a proposal from Department of Energy secretary, Alfonso Cusi, to look at pursuing the nuclear option to meet increasing electricity demands.
The proposal was reportedly brought up at a cabinet meeting on March 2. This was after a proposed executive order on the matter which was drafted by Cusi and submitted to Duterte on February 20.
Presidential spokesperson, Salvador Panelo, told reporters after the cabinet meeting that Duterte would study the proposal.
Bishop Alminaza hoped that Duterte would reject such a move and pointed to past comments made by the president on the issue which indicated he was not keen on the idea.
The bishop mentioned the president having instructed the Department of Energy to promote renewable energy, which is “a cheaper and safer source of energy compared to the possible holocaust risked with nuclear power.”
He pointed out, “Energy from nuclear activities threatens human life and the lives of creatures great and small.”
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The bishop also urged Duterte not to sign the executive order and instead tell the energy secretary to focus efforts on pursuing renewable energy.
“This is what would truly be beneficial for our people and would also serve as a concrete act of care for our common home,” he added.
Nuclear energy has been a contentious issue in the Philippines, with opponents also arguing that risks would be high considering the country is prone to natural disasters such as earthquakes, volcanic eruptions and typhoons.
A nuclear power plant constructed in Morong, Bataan, during the administration of late dictator Ferdinand Marcos was never fuelled and was mothballed when concerns were raised by opponents after it emerged the plant was built near a fault line and a volcano.