By Danessa Rivera (The
Philippine Star) | Updated October 4, 2016 - 12:00am
MANILA, Philippines - The Energy
Regulatory Commission (ERC) has tapped a third party consultant to do a review
on the system loss charges aimed to reduce the pass-on burden to consumers.
The power regulator commissioned a
third party to study and make reconmmendations on the system loss charges aimed
to benefit consumers, ERC spokesperson Floresinda Digal said after Sen. Sherwin
Gatchalian asked for updates on the reduction of system loss charges during a
Senate hearing yesterday.
System loss refers to unbilled power
caused by pilferage and physical loss of energy when electricity passes through
distribution lines, which can be passed on to consumers as stated under
Republic Act 7832, or Anti-Electricity and Electric Transmission
Lines/Materials Pilferage Act of 1994.
The ERC awarded last month the
contract to conduct the system loss review to local consultancy firm PowerSolv
Inc., Digal said.
Under the terms of reference (TOR),
PowerSolv will review how the components of the system loss charge can be
segregated into technical and non-technical items as well as study updating the
system loss cap, she said.
“The first part of the TOR will be a
study on how system loss can be segregated to technical and non-technical,
including what levels of technical and non-technical, if ever, will be
recoverable. The second part is the establishment of a new cap we are presently
at 8.5 percent and 13 percent. They will also study if it can still be
lowered,” Digal said.
Technical system loss is an inherent
loss in the physical delivery of electricity while non-technical system loss is
a result of pliferage, human error like tampering of meters and erroneous meter
reading.
Currently, the ERC has set the
system loss cap at 8.5 percent for privately-owned distribution utilities and
13 percent for electric cooperatives (EC), which can be passed on to consumers
through a line item in their monthly electricity bills.
In particular, system loss of Manila
Electric Co. (Meralco), the country’s largest power distributor, is 6.46
percent, way below the cap.
Meanwhile, 89 ECs were able to meet
the cap set by ERC in 2015, based on the latest data from the National
Electrification Administration (NEA), the agency tasked for the rural
electrification program.
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