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Foreign investments key to going nuclear
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Cagayan, Palawan, Negros, Zamboanga sites on shortlist for nuclear power plants
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Energy dep t welcomes US investment in renewables, nuclear
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on January 19, 2021 at 5:03 pm
The plan to have nuclear energy as one of the country’s power sources is now awaiting President Rodrigo Duterte’s decision, according to Energy Sec. Alfonso Cusi.
Cusi said the Department of Energy (DOE) submitted the proposed nuclear power plan to the chief executive last Friday (January 15), a little over a week before the deadline set by Executive Order (EO) 116.
The EO, signed by Duterte on July 24, 2020, gave the DOE-chaired Nuclear Energy Program Inter-Agency Committee (NEP-IAC) six months to come up with a plan to conduct a study and determine the national position for a nuclear energy program (NEP) in accordance with pertinent guidelines from the International Atomic Energy Agency, as well as relevant laws.
DFA EXEC SAYS By DONA MAGSINO, GMA News
Published January 14, 2021 5:42pm
Updated January 14, 2021 10:12pm
Then DFA secretary (now Taguig Rep) Alan Peter Cayetano signs the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons at the United Nations headquarters in New York on September 20, 2017. Karl Norman Alonzo/PPD The pending Senate concurrence to the ratification of the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons (TPNW) would not prevent the Philippines from exploring nuclear energy, an official of the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) said Thursday. This does not affect our current nuclear energy program. What is prohibited is the acts enumerated in Article 1 and this does not affect the inalienable rights of the state to pursue, research, and development in the peaceful uses of nuclear energy, DFA Director Marge Malang said in a Senate hearing on foreign relations.