Published
May 3, 2017, 5:32 PM By Myrna
M. Velasco
The Energy Regulatory
Commission (ERC) has ordered power utility giant Manila Electric Company
(Meralco) to refund P6.927 billion worth of estimated over-recoveries in the
past three years – and this will translate to reduction of P0.7541 per kilowatt
hour (kWh) per month in the bills of its customers from May to July this year.
The power regulator’s
mandate is for the utility company “to immediately” enforce the pay-back to
customers on what it labels as “overcharges.” The refund was prescribed to be
undertaken in the next three billing cycles.
ERC Chairman Jose
Vicente B. Salazar said “the refund should be reflected in the May 2017
billing,” noting that this is warranted “so Meralco customers will feel its
effects right away.”
He explained that such
will “offset the remaining P0.22 per kWh to be collected this month due to the
Malampaya shutdown.”
The Commission explained that on March 31 this year, Meralco formally filed a petition “to reflect the over-recoveries of P5.847 billion,” but this also lumped in P1.08 billion in real property tax payments sought as “deductions from the total refund.”
The Commission explained that on March 31 this year, Meralco formally filed a petition “to reflect the over-recoveries of P5.847 billion,” but this also lumped in P1.08 billion in real property tax payments sought as “deductions from the total refund.”
In the same filing, the
utility firm pleaded “to refund the said amount for the next 36 months,” but
the duration had been substantially shortened by the regulatory body.
The ERC emphasized that
it “disallowed any deduction and instead ordered Meralco to pay over-recovery
charges amounting to P6,927,086,686.38.” These over-recoveries accrued from
January 2014 to December 2016.
Salazar said they want
the refund consummated at the soonest possible time, taking into account the
welfare of the electricity consumers as their priority.
He stressed “the order
of refund reflects ERC’s commitment to ensure that power rates remain
affordable and reliable without compromising the continuity of electricity
services.”
In a text message to
the media, Meralco spokesperson Joe Zaldarriaga said the company “will await
the said order of the Commission, but this was actually triggered by our
compliance filing towards the end of March.”
He said “we filed an
application with the ERC to confirm pass-through charges from 2014 to 2016.
Part of our application was a prayer for provisional authority allowing Meralco
to collect or refund any over- or under-recovery as may be determined by the
Commission.”
The mandate on refund
of over-recoveries by servicing power utilities is in line with the provisions
of ERC Resolution No. 16 series of 2009 and ERC Resolution No. 23 series of
2010, requiring distribution utilities like Meralco “to file for over- or
under-recoveries of pass-through rates charged against consumers.”
Pass-through components
in the rates include generation, transmission and system loss charges, along
with feed-in-tariffs for renewable energy capacities as well as subsidies for
lifeline customers and senior citizens.
The ERC noted though
that “recovery of real property taxes paid to local government units is not
included and therefore should not be offset from the total refund amount.”
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