Tuesday, June 22, 2021

Marcos tells DOE, NGCP to stop pointing fingers on power outages

CEBU CITY -- Senator Imee Marcos told the Department of Energy (DOE) and National Grid Corporation of the Philippines (NGCP) to stop pointing fingers and instead find solutions to power outages in the country.

“As quarantines are eased, curfews are lifted, and vaccination is ramped up, businesses will be resuming operations for longer hours that demand more electricity. We also expect face-to-face classes and regular rail transport to gradually resume,” Marcos said.

The reopening economy will not withstand prolonged blackouts, as those that occurred in the early 90’s because energy solutions were ignored, she added.

Marcos who chairs the Senate economic affairs committee cited that power outages may continue this June and in coming months due to the ongoing preventive maintenance of power plants and the lack of new contracts for added energy capacity.

Marcos pointed out that the power-generating capacity of the Malampaya gas field, which supplies 30 percent of Luzon’s energy needs, is expected to run out in 2024.

“Is the NGCP trying to reduce costs by not contracting reserves, is there no power to contract, or are investors hesitating to build the necessary merchant plants because they do not expect to be contracted?” Marcos asked.

Although the DOE has promised to investigate if industry players deliberately caused the recent power shortages, Marcos said that collusion would be difficult to prove under present guidelines.

Among the legislative solutions that Marcos has proposed is to amend Republic Act 10667, or the Philippine Competition Law.

This will allow the Energy Regulatory Commission (ERC) and Philippine Competition Commission to better manage what ERC chief Agnes Devanadera called “pricing play” in the Wholesale Electricity Spot Market (WESM), Marcos stated.

Marcos explained that the WESM’s secondary price cap, which is meant to protect consumers from the manipulation of electricity prices by power generation companies, has been hit more than 400 times this year, compared to only three times in 2019.

Another solution is to redefine power reserves, which at present is set at 4% of peak demand. This may need to be raised to help the system cope with increasing power supply demand and prevent more blackouts, Marcos added.

Marcos also called for the swift passage of an amended Foreign Investment Act when Senate sessions resume in late July, which could lead to the exploration of urgent alternative to Malampaya, including green energy and nuclear power. (Photos: Google Images)

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