by Myrna Velasco June 9, 2016
(updated)
The (PEMC), operator of the
country’s power spot market, expressed fears that its operational efficiencies
can be severely affected if the recent enlistment of the Philippine Electricity
Market Corporation (PEMC) as government-owned and controlled corporation (GOCC)
will not be reversed.
In a briefing with reporters, PEMC
President Melinda L. Ocampo has noted that there are emergency procurements
they have been pursuing especially for the information technology (IT)
component of the Wholesale Electricity Spot Market (WESM) – and this is one
aspect they can no longer do swiftly if they will be legally bound by the
government’s procurement law.
“If we will be categorized as
government, then we will be subject to salary standardization and the
procurement law. Now, look at our responsibilities and our functions,
particularly IT, sometimes we have emergency needs…if we are government and
procurement goes on too long, then there would come a time that we will be
losing the market because of inefficiency in procurement,” she lamented.
Ocampo qualified that if policy
framers would really refer back to the intent and spirit of the Electric Power
Industry Reform Act (EPIRA), “the expectation really is, we are private
entity.”
And while the legal personality of
the WESM operator still stands on wobbly ground, she asserted that “so far,
we’re still private because we are not asking for budget from the DBM
(Department of Budget and Management).”
She said there had been continuing
talks between the Department of Energy (DOE) and the Governance Commission for
GOCCs (GCG) on how to legally resolve the inclusion of PEMC in the Executive
Order of Malacañang putting it in the roll as government-owned and controlled
entity.
“They keep on communicating with us
and we keep on responding that we are not government,” Ocampo stressed.
The PEMC chief executive further
qualified “there had been discussions. So far, let’s wait, but then we are
private. Otherwise, we will be losing our Board unless they would agree to file
their SALN (statement of assets, liabilities and net worth).”
Talks to sort out this legal
entanglement for the WESM operator, she said, are fundamentally between GCG
Chairman Cesar L. Villanueva and Energy Secretary Zenaida Y. Monsada
being the designated chair of the PEMC Board.
“The evolution of the market is very
fast so we should be able to cope with the requirements. We cannot
dilly-dally just because of bidding processes that we will adhere to,” Ocampo
said.
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