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Monday, December 23, 2024

Coming home: EDC ensures safe return of employees stranded due to COVID-19 pandemic

One of the toughest challenges one can experience during this COVID-19 pandemic is being stranded and locked down in a distant province away from home. This was the situation that more than 150 employees and contractors of Lopez-led Energy Development Corporation (EDC) found themselves in soon after community quarantine and strict travel restrictions were imposed in many parts of the country in mid-March.

EDC, being the largest renewable energy producer in the Philippines, operates geothermal power plants in key regions and provinces such as Bicol, Negros, Leyte, and North Cotabato; a combined solar and wind power farm in Ilocos Norte; and a hydroelectric power plant in Nueva Ecija. Employees and contractors often travel to or are temporarily assigned to its different sites as part of their work programs.

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“With electricity being an essential resource all the more needed now, the company doubled-down on its commitment to keep uninterrupted, life-saving power flowing into the grid, but we also had a duty to keep our plant employees and contractors—our very own frontliners—safe and supported,” explained Ana Marie C. Agapinan, EDC’s extrication project team lead.

Ariel Rogel Ampong, EDC operations excellence support head, was tasked to formulate the transportation plan and movement schedule, optimizing the route plans and minimizing transport risks, along with teammates Josephine Ao and Mheryl Espinosa. “It was truly a concerted effort among several teams in the company,” said Ampong.

The planning began in early April, bringing together representatives from relevant operational units of the company who met twice a week, adjusting plans to consider the guidelines of the government’s Inter-Agency Task Force on Emerging Infectious Diseases (IATF-EID), the requirements of relevant local government units and other guidelines related to travel.

The final number of returnees was reduced to 54 as some have decided to stay in their current site.

“Good thing that EDC has comfortable temporary facilities that provide for the needs of employees and contractors who take on the valiant effort of keeping the lights on for our customers and the public despite the pandemic,” said Ampong.

After weeks of careful planning and detailed coordination, a final extrication execution meeting was held on May 23 and the day of return was set for May 25. A chartered flight hopping between Manila, Ormoc, Davao, Dumaguete, and Legazpi was the preferred mode of transportation, but a back-up plan for land and sea travel was also put in place in case quarantine protocols evolved in the interim.

A 46-seater, twin turboprop aircraft chartered from Air Swift originating from Manila flew a total of six legs, picking up and dropping off passengers at various stops, all completed within a span of 12 hours.

Passengers who alighted in Metro Manila were also brought straight to their homes in Makati City, Mandaluyong City, and the Luzon provinces of Bulacan, Batangas and Ilocos Sur. Many of them endured over 70 days of being stranded before being flown home.

Roxanne Atayde, a geoscientist based in EDC’s Leyte geothermal facility, was worried for her senior citizen parents back home in Bulacan at the start of the lockdown. “I was relieved to know that management was working on an extrication plan while I was also kept very comfortable living in Leyte in the meantime. I am really grateful to EDC for their genuine concern for the welfare of their employees.”

“Throughout this pandemic, we have been guided by our Lopez Values. In particular, the value of Employee Welfare and Wellness which has been at the top of our list since the pandemic started, and this extrication project and all the teamwork it inspired demonstrated that,” said Miguel de Vera, EDC sponsor of the extrication project.

EDC generates 37% of the country’s total renewable energy output and serves about 10% of its overall electricity demand with the company’s total installed capacity of 1,473.3MW. Its 1,181MW geothermal portfolio accounts for 61% of the country’s total installed geothermal capacity, helping put the Philippines on the map as the world’s third-largest geothermal power producer.

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