By: Cielito F. Habito 12:38 AM June 17th, 2016
http://opinion.inquirer.net/95248/epira-is-working
FIFTEEN YEARS ago,
Congress enacted the Electric Power Industry Reform Act (Republic Act No. 9136,
aka Epira), aimed to achieve reliable and competitively priced electricity—a
goal that has continued to elude us. Critics have called for its review or even
outright repeal due to its supposed ineffectiveness. But other countries that
have yet to move away from subsidized power are already pursuing their own
versions of Epira, on the recognition that their power pricing regimes cannot
be sustainable.
Epira’s intent was
straightforward: Remove monopolies in the power industry through privatization
of the National Power Corp.’s assets, and foster competition in the industry to
make it more cost-effective and efficient. With these, electricity prices
should go down. As of end-2015, only the Malaya Thermal Power Plant in Luzon,
and Power Barge 104 and the Agus and Pulangi hydroelectric plants in Mindanao
remain government-owned. But our electricity prices have stayed high and
consistently among the highest in the region. The law has been blamed for high
prices and price volatility due to the removal of government power subsidies,
the layering on of profits due to the unbundling of the different industry
subsectors, and the introduction of the Wholesale Electricity Spot Market
(WESM). While intended as a venue for market competition to set power prices,
many see the WESM as a venue for alleged collusion among generation companies
(gencos) instead. The generation charge that is the WESM’s object is the main
cost driver and largest portion of the monthly power bills we all pay.
The WESM’s weaknesses
came to the fore late in 2013 when, in the wake of Supertyphoon “Yolanda,”
Filipinos got hit with whopping average electricity prices of P15.171 and
P18.194 per kilowatt-hour in November and December of that year, respectively.
The Energy Regulatory Commission (ERC) eventually reversed these charges, but
consumers already got a taste of what could possibly go wrong. The way the WESM
works, all participating gencos must submit, for every trading session,
generation offers that include the minimum and maximum megawatts they can
generate, and at what price. The cheapest power sources are prioritized for
dispatch to consumers. The most expensive dispatched electricity becomes the
basis price for that trading session, and all dispatched electricity is bought
from the gencos at that price.
The flaw in the system
was that gencos that did not want to dispatch power could artificially jack up
their prices to the WESM-allowable maximum, so their electricity would be the
last priority for dispatch. But in dire straits, such as in the post-Yolanda
period, even the most expensive last-priority offer ended up being dispatched,
leading to the incredible price hike.
In the investigation, a
number of gencos were found to have violated the WESM’s “must-offer” and/or
“must-run” rules. Melinda Ocampo, president of the Philippine Electricity
Market Corp. (PEMC) that operates the WESM, noted that companies that withheld
capacity or did not make an offer likely led to the higher power rates at the
WESM. The PEMC fined the violating companies, who took the matter to the
courts. This incident has impelled the Department of Energy, ERC and PEMC to
seek ways to further protect power consumers.
The WESM has in fact
proven its worth, showing that it can bring prices down when there are ample
supplies to fill demand. Its prices reached their lowest for the year in
September 2015, with the recovery in supply after plants came back from
shutdowns, coupled with the drop in oil and coal prices. Consequently, the
generation charge in our Meralco bills that month went down to a P3.995/kWh.
With over 90 percent of the generation costs coming from generation contracts,
the difference from the previous month’s P4.132/kWh may not appear
proportionally substantial. But even as contracted prices do not readily adjust
to short-term market fluctuations, the WESM made it possible for consumers to
still benefit immediately from this reprieve. That September dip was in fact
the lowest since October 2009, when record rainfall levels close to high
power-consuming Metro Manila brought about cooler weather, and also led to
higher dispatch of cheap hydroelectric power.
Those two instances
demonstrating how generation charges have responded to market supply and demand
dynamics both raise a matter more pressing than the WESM’s operating rules: the
apparent lack of reserve generating capacity. A PEMC study (“Study of
Mitigating Measures for the Philippine Electricity Market”) determined the
price hike of 2013 to be influenced by “the prevailing tight demand and supply
conditions in the Luzon region… as well as high occurrence of insufficient
supply/under-generation… coinciding with the maintenance shutdown of Malampaya
and a series of outages of major coal plants. In addition, supply was further
limited in Luzon due to the unavailability of the Leyte-Luzon High Voltage
Direct Current link caused by the devastation of typhoon Yolanda…” While we’ve
come a long way from the power crisis of the early 1990s, we are not exactly in
the clear either.
With improvements to
the WESM rules and their enforcement, and the impending full implementation of
retail competition and open access for consumers above 750 kWh of power usage
per month, Epira can yet bring electricity prices further down. Epira is in
fact working. But it can only be as effective as how well we enforce it to
ensure sufficient competition in the industry, and how well we ensure that we have
adequate power supplies, regular and reserve alike.
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