
HOUSE WATCH | When Green Power Meets a Very Red Flag
Clean energy is supposed to be about the future.
This story, however, is about accountability—present tense.
A solar energy firm linked to Leandro Leviste has been slapped with a ₱24-billion fine, according to reports, over alleged regulatory violations tied to its power supply commitments.
The penalty—one of the largest of its kind—was imposed following findings that the company failed to deliver contracted power capacity, raising questions about compliance, oversight, and the real cost of missed obligations in a sector that enjoys strong political and environmental goodwill.
Regulators emphasized that renewable energy players are not exempt from rules simply because their projects carry green labels. Contracts, after all, are color-blind. Power agreements are enforced not by intention, but by performance.
Quietly, the case also highlights a broader tension in Philippine energy policy: the push for rapid renewable expansion versus the discipline required to keep promises on the grid. Ambition accelerates headlines. Delivery stabilizes cities.
For critics, the fine is a reminder that scale does not dilute responsibility. For supporters, it is a procedural hurdle that will be challenged and clarified.
Either way, the message is difficult to miss:
clean energy still runs on hard rules