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First Gen Bets Big On Renewables With $20 Billion Expansion

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First Gen Corporation is making one of the boldest moves in the local energy sector: a $20 billion investment plan over five years to more than double its power portfolio to 13 gigawatts by 2030. The Lopez-led company aims to expand across geothermal, hydro, solar, and natural gas, positioning itself as a key player in the Philippines’ green energy transition.

The strategy is ambitious. Executives know that renewable energy projects take time: site development, regulatory approvals, financing, and construction often stretch across several years. But the company is betting that the long-term demand for cleaner energy will outweigh near-term hurdles. Rising electricity needs from households, industry, and especially the booming data center market make renewable energy not just an environmental play but an economic necessity.

At the same time, the move is aligned with the government’s commitment to reach 35% renewable energy in the power mix by 2030 and 50% by 2040. By getting ahead of the curve, First Gen could secure prime sites, long-term contracts, and regulatory goodwill.

What this means for consumers and workers: For consumers, the hope is that a diversified and renewable-heavy grid will stabilize power prices and reduce dependence on volatile fossil fuel imports. In the short term, costs may remain high as investments are built out, but the long game is cheaper and cleaner electricity. For workers, the plan promises thousands of jobs in construction, engineering, and plant operations. But delays in execution could slow both the green transition and the rollout of employment opportunities.

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