R, since you went ahead and attributed a number of positions to me that I don't in fact hold, maybe we should just call it even?
But as to: "The plants will be built because the majority of the Filipino people desperately want them built."
I'm not sure how many more ways to say it so you can take it in.
No one is desperately clamoring for specifically
coal plants to be built. Many people want more or some access to electricity. They don't give a flying f what source it comes from, and from polls, it looks like most of them would prefer it coming from non-ff sources.
If I got to choose, I would crash crash first world economies by over 15% a year (ideally in a controlled and equitable way) to allow some space for the poorest to develop by whatever means they may need in order to reach at least minimal levels of well being.
(As discussed elsewhere, and in spite of P's protestations to the contrary, even if all their new energy came from renewables, right now most of those are produced and transported and maintained using ff, so it would still involve a major ff commitment.)
But that is not likely to happen, short of a more than 2007-8 crises that does not get resolved bailed out.
So if that is not happening, what are the options?
1) the world's poor living wretchedly and dying prematurely at about the same rate as they are now doing (no new ff burnt to improve their lives)
2) the world's poor living ever more wretchedly and dying in much much larger much more prematurely (massive numbers of large ff burning plants used to very temporarily improved their lifestyles)
The ethical calculus would seem to lean pretty heavily towards #1, it seems to me.
Again, how the new energy is supplied does make a difference, and there are many other relatively low-carbon ways that the lives of the poorest could be vastly improved--even slightly improved education, housing, healthcare, security...
But if you strip it down to these two stark choices, it is pretty clear which one prevents the most premature death and avoids the worst other effects.