Published July 15, 2017, 10:00 PM By Myrna M.
Velasco
Payments of feed-in-tariff (FIT)
incentives to renewable energy (RE) developers remain short by P8.15 billion as
of July this year, fund administrator of National Transmission Corporation
(TransCo) has revealed this week.
According to Dinna O. Dizon, head of
TransCo’s compliance monitoring department, the FIT settlement shortfall is
equivalent to 27.99 percent of the total amount that should have been paid to
RE developers.
Since the latter part of 2014 until
July 5 this year, she emphasized that total payments already made by TransCo hovered
at P20.962 billion or 72.01 percent of the total expected payout.
The deficiency in RE subsidy
payments, Dizon noted, still excluded interest charges amounting to P187.53
million – accruing primarily due to delays in regulatory approvals.
TransCo has filed an application for
adjustment in the FIT-Allowance (FIT-All) charges being passed on in the
consumers’ electric bills, but only the 2016 portion of the adjustment had been
approved so far by the Energy Regulatory Commission.
FIT-All is a separate line item in
the electric bill and paid by all ratepayers, fundamentally to compensate RE
developments in the country – the determination of which had been based on the
caps set by the Department of Energy (DOE) on installations.
Of the P0.2291 per kilowatt-hour
(kWh) increase in FIT-All petitioned for, it was just the P0.059 per kWh
fraction that had been given preliminary go-signal by the industry’s regulatory
agency.
That rendered fund administrator
TransCo to still be scant of financial resources to fully remunerate the
qualified RE developments under the FIT incentive scheme.
According to the state-run firm, it
is now scouring for options on how to bridge the finance gap – and such
included bid to secure prospective zero-interest loan from the World Bank Group.
Of the FIT payments, the bulk at
43-percent had been funneled to wind power installations; followed by solar and
biomass with 13 percent share each; and the smallest pie went to hydro projects
at measly 3.0 percent.
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