A Subic-registered company is now producing cost-efficient and environment-friendly energy and lighting solutions touted to address growing concerns of rising energy costs and degraded environment.
BandaSolar, which traces its roots to Bandacorp PI Inc. that was established here in 2006, is now offering Filipino consumers the benefits of renewable energy with its solar panels and light emitting diode (LED) lamps that could cut down power bills by more than 50 percent.
This has prompted Subic Bay Metropolitan Authority (SBMA) Chairman Roberto V. Garcia to call for a study on the installation of solar panels for all street lights in the free port and the use of 250-watt LED lamps instead of the standard 1,000-watt halogen lamps.
Bob Silvers, president of BandaSolar, said that his company addresses the concerns of consumers on the seemingly relentless power rate hikes, and seeks to meet growing demand
for solar solutions in the Philippines, as well as internationally.
"The first question in the mind of Filipinos is 'How am I going to cut on my power bills?' And the answer is: turn to sun and use its energy," Silvers said during an exhibit of products here. "Solar energy will cut your electric bills up to half or more," he added.
Silvers said that historically, the use of solar power was limited only to those living in remote locations with no other choice but to device a solar power generator with a cost equivalent to P100 per watt, or P100,000 per kilowatt, enough to light a small house.
Having an average of a 25-year lifetime, solar panels are being sold mostly in China, Japan, India, Australia and South Korea, which accounted for 3.3 gigawatts of demand in 2011, with Japan and China leading in the Southeast Asian region.
"But that was before the solar panels were in mass production in such a volume where it became part of the energy economy competing with more expensive petroleum and other forms of energy," Silvers pointed out.
Specifically, LED street lights that will brighten dark corners; lights with motion detectors for yards and dangerous alleys and porch lights for individual homes.
Lilac Street in Newhallville will be first in the neighborhood to have new lights installed along its two blocks, thanks to a collaboration among churches that wanted to close the chasm between one poor city neighborhood and its richer neighbors over the Prospect Street hill in East Rock.
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