By Danessa Rivera (The
Philippine Star) | Updated September 29, 2016 - 12:00am
MANILA, Philippines – A weaker peso
and higher coal price could pressure electricity rates up in the next billing
periods, Manila Electric Co. (Meralco) said.
These are the two factors that could
put pressure on generation cost in the coming months, Meralco senior vice
president and head of utility economics Larry Fernandez said on the sidelines
of a Senate hearing yesterday.
“One is the depreciation of the
peso, many of the inputs to generation cost are dollar denominated, so any
depreciation of the peso can have an impact on the generation cost,” he said.
“Second, we noticed increases in coal price. If this continues, it might affect
the generation charge.”
Fernandez said these are factors
affected by world events like the exchange rate and coal prices.
The peso breached the 47 to $1 level
on Sept. 11 and more recently the 48 to $1 level on Sept. 26, the local
currency’s weakest level in seven years.
Meanwhile, Meralco gets 37.1 percent
of supply from coal power plants, based on its first half report.
With the volatility in the global
scene, the Meralco official said it is still difficult to determine the trend
in the coming months, particularly in October, since the power distributor has
yet to receive billings from power generators.
“We need to see if they will already
compute the foreign exchange effect and the more updated coal prices in their
bills to us,” Fernandez said. “But we are continuing to monitor the fuel prices
and the foreign exchange rate.”
Currently, Meralco’s overall rates
are at record lows. “I think the pressure is to keep it where it is but there
are already pressures for a slight increase in generation cost,” Fernandez
said.
Meralco recently announced a
reduction of P0.0451 per kilowatt-hour (kwh) in overall rates to P8.46 per kwh,
lower compared to September 2015’s P8.55 per kwh.
For the period, the lower
transmission charges helped offset the higher generation charge caused by instances
power supply shortage during the supply month.
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