Published
June 26, 2017, 10:00 PM By Myrna M. Velasco
The Energy Regulatory
Commission (ERC) is being cautioned on succeeding decisions it might render
that would drive up electricity rates for consumers, especially those on
feed-in-tariff (FIT) subsidy for the renewable energy (RE) sector as well as
other pending applications of the regulated power entities.
This was sounded off by
CitizenWatch Secretary General Paco Pangalangan while raising alarm that “we
fear the additional price increases, especially that of the FIT, since this is
a shown pattern of continuous increase over the years.”
At least for customers
in the franchise area of Manila Electric Company (Meralco), there will be a
three-month rate reprieve because of the P6.9-billion refund ordered recently
by the industry regulator.
But the group noted
this would all be canceled out once the ERC starts issuing decisions on pending
petitions that would have ‘rate hike effect’ on the consumers’ electric bills.
“If the FIT and other
fees continue to go up, it will negate the benefits immediately owed to
consumers through the refund and price decrease and only further prejudice
consumers in the long run,” Pangalangan said.
For forecasting wrongly
on how prices will shape in the country’s electricity spot market, the subsidy
being paid for by consumers now to RE installations had grown way too higher
than reference ‘avoided cost’ of conventional technologies.
That as a given, FIT
fund administrator National Transmission Corporation (TransCo) keeps on seeking
hike in the feed-in-tariff allowance (FIT-All), with the last installment
approved at P0.059 per kilowatt hour.
There is still a
pending FIT application to reflect upward adjustment for calendar year 2017,
which the ERC is expected to act on anytime.
Based on TransCo’s
filing last year, it batted for an increase to the FIT-All at the level of
P0.229 per kWh, so the additional charges may still round up to P0.05 per kWh.
FIT-All is a separate
line item in the electric bills; and while it appears that the amount is
negligible, the yearly collection from consumers actually runs into the P16
billion to P18 billion range.
The other pending applications
that may increase power rates include the universal charge (UC) recoveries of
Power Sector Assets and Liabilities Management Corporation (PSALM); National
Power Corporation; and the cost recoveries for ‘force majeure events’ of the
National Grid Corporation of the Philippines.
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