By
Lenie Lectura - March 1,
2017
The Department of Energy (DOE) and
the Manila Electric Co. (Meralco) separately said the National Grid Corp. of
the Philippines (NGCP) declared a yellow-alert notice from 10:01 a.m. to 3 p.m.
“due to insufficient operating reserve brought about by the outage of San
Gabriel [414 megawatts, or MW] at 8:05 a.m.”
San Gabriel is the fourth gas plant
of Lopez-led First Gen Corp. (First Gen). It is located near the company’s
three other gas plants in Santa Rita, Batangas.
The company claimed San Gabriel is
the most efficient natural gas-fired power plant in Southeast Asia.
Per LRCC [Luzon Regional
Coordinating Center] assessment, we will be declaring yellow alert today
from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. due to tripping of San Gabriel due to boiler
feed-pump trouble at 8:05 a.m.,” a text message from the DOE stated.
Aside from San Gabriel, there was
also another plant on forced outage. This plant was Kalayaan Unit 2, 177 MW. It
experienced “excitation system trouble”.
Other power plants on scheduled
maintenance shutdown are Calaca Unit 1 (300 MW), Masinloc Unit 2 (300 MW),
GN Power Unit1 (300 MW), GN Power Unit 2 (300 MW), Kalayaan Unit 1 (177
MW), and Sta. Rita Unit 1 (265 MW).
Calaca Unit 2 (300 MW) and QPPL (509
MW) are still on extended outage.
The forced outage and the scheduled
maintenance shutdown incidents led to a drop in contingency reserve
for noon and afternoon peaks at 251 MW and 490 MW, respectively.
A yellow alert is issued by NGCP
when contingency reserve is less than the capacity of the largest synchronized
unit of the grid in Luzon. This is equivalent to 647 MW, or one unit of the
Sual power plant.
Meralco, according to utility
economics head Lawrence Fernandez, said the utility firm immediately contacted
ILP (Interruptible Load Program) participants to prepare for possible
activation after the yellow alert notice was issued.
“As of 12 noon, 269 accounts
indicated readiness to deload if required, equivalent to around 500 MW of
deloading capacity,” Fernandez said.
The DOE, at 3
p.m. of Wednesday, said the “yellow alert” notice was lifted
effective 1301H “due to sufficient operating reserve brought about by low
actual system demand and Malaya 2 declared for normal loading at 300 MW.”
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