Ogie Atadero
Last Apri 28, we gathered with 30 Homeowners Association (HOA) officers from various parts of Metro Manila and neighboring cities. The session was hosted by the Community Organizing Multiversity (COM)—a community we deeply value for its commitment to strengthening grassroots leadership and nurturing people’s organizations, development workers, and community organizers across the country.
What stood out immediately was the energy in the room—a mix of curiosity, urgency, and a shared realization: the global energy transition is already underway, and we cannot afford to be left behind. We unpacked what this shift means for our everyday lives—from rising electricity costs to unreliable supply—and discussed how renewable energy is no longer just an “alternative,” but a necessary direction. While we explored various government mechanisms, emerging programs, and the responses of the private sector, we grounded the conversation in a single truth: renewable energy is not merely an investment for the future—it is something communities can begin preparing for today.
One of the most engaging segments of the session was a hands-on demonstration of a portable, deployment-ready renewable energy solution using a Bluetti power station. For many, this was their first time seeing how accessible solar-powered systems can actually be—viewing them not as distant, large-scale projects, but as something tangible that can be brought directly into a home or community.
However, we remained clear that access alone is insufficient; understanding is key. We walked through practical considerations for adopting renewable energy systems, asking:
What is your actual energy need?
What is your base load?
Is the system sized correctly?
What kind of after-sales support is guaranteed?
This is where the energy audit activity became vital. As a group, participants began mapping their household and community energy consumption—estimating their needs, identifying priority loads, and realizing that energy planning is something they can own and lead. We also emphasized energy efficiency and conservation—not as a form of sacrifice, but as a smarter way of living. It is about optimizing how we use energy, ensuring nothing is wasted, and aligning our consumption with what truly matters. After all, the transition is not only about shifting sources; it is about changing habits.
What made this gathering even more meaningful was the knowledge that this work resonates far beyond our own borders. Recently, our friends from Casa Pueblo in Puerto Rico shared our activity, writing: “We are glad that our experience of the just energy transition continues to be shared everywhere.” Casa Pueblo is more than an organization; it is a living example of what a people-powered energy transition looks like. For decades, they have organized communities, defended the environment, and built decentralized renewable energy systems. When major hurricanes left much of their island in the dark, Casa Pueblo mobilized community-led solar initiatives—powering schools, health centers, and entire neighborhoods through collective action. They did not wait; they organized, they built, and they transformed.
We ended our workshop with a powerful series of “what ifs”:
What if our communities took control of our energy future?
What if we broke away from the systems that keep us dependent?
What if we started building renewable energy systems for our own communities?
The story of Casa Pueblo reminds us that this is not just a concept; it is possible, and it is already happening. It challenges us not just to imagine, but to act. Because at the end of the day, communities should not remain captive customers. We deserve better choices. We deserve accessible, reliable, and sustainable energy. And perhaps the transition starts exactly where we are.