Balanga Bishop Ruperto Santos has renewed his diocese’s opposition to efforts to revive the nuclear plant on Bataan peninsula near Manila.

“Our pastoral statement of ‘No to BNPP’ rehabilitation stands,” CBCP News quoted the prelate's interview on Thursday.
President-elect Ferdinand Marcos Jr. said he may open the Bataan Nuclear Power Plant, his late father’s project.
He said reviving the dormant BNPP in Morong town would help solve the country’s energy crisis and growing power demand.
The Philippine Nuclear Research Institute (PNRI) earlier said that South Korea has offered to rehabilitate the BNPP at a cost of $1 billion.
For Santos, the hefty amount is better used for developing clean renewable, affordable and safe energy solutions.
“They should focus on renewable energy, like windmills in Ilocos Norte. So, why not promote that?” he said.
Completed in 1984, the plant was mothballed two years later following the ouster of Marcos Sr. and due to corruption allegations and safety concerns.