Philippines to add 19 GW of energy capacity by 2030, majority renewable
The Department of Energy (DOE) is anticipating a total of 19,190 megawatts (MW) worth of energy projects from 2025 to 2030, spanning across non-renewable and renewable energy (RE).
These capacities projected by the DOE would help meet the country’s rising power demand and further support economic development.
According to DOE’s data, expected RE capacity is bigger than non-RE capacity, as developers have committed about 11,684 MW to clean energy projects, while the latter has about 7,505.7 MW.
Among the many renewable projects expected, the government recorded more committed solar developments within the next five years, with 8,431 MW in the pipeline.
Wind developments came in second with 2,233 MW worth of committed projects.
The DOE also included the committed capacity for energy storage systems (ESS), which are designed to stabilize the power grid by storing excess power during low demand and utilize it once the demand has increased.
On the other hand, natural gas developments are expected to bring in 5,630 MW worth of energy from 2025 to 2030, making it the largest committed capacity among coal and oil.
Despite the coal moratorium, the DOE noted that it has about 1,705 MW of committed projects across Luzon, Visayas, and Mindanao.
The DOE implemented the coal ban last 2020 to halt coal plant endorsements as a way to promote cleaner energy sources and minimize fossil fuel dependence. Still, some projects are exempt from this, namely those that are already operating, under construction or had made financial developments, as well as committed.
The data was finalized as of late March 2025.