By
Lenie Lectura - July 2, 2017
GENERATION charge, a
big chunk of an electric bill, is expected to go up this month.
According to the Manila
Electric Co. (Meralco), there are two factors that are expected to push
generation charge up for the supply month of June. These are the Wholesale
Electricity Spot Market (WESM) price and the depreciation of the peso.
“In the June supply
month, we experienced events that placed upward pressure on generation costs,”
said Joe Zaldarriaga, Meralco spokesman.
Zaldarriaga said the
600-megawatt (MW) Unit 2 of the Sual power plant went on forced outage
beginning June 14, coinciding with the absence of Santa Rita Module 40 (250
MW), which was on scheduled maintenance.
“This 850-MW reduction
in supply may have affected spot-market prices. For another, the peso
depreciated in recent days to more than 50 to the dollar, versus 49.765 in
May,” Zaldarriaga explained. “Both factors may have pushed up generation costs
that may affect the July generation charge.”
Last month generation
charge reflected in the consumers’ electric bills stood at P3.8586. This was
lower by P1.0253 per kilowatt-hour (kWh), from P4.8839 per kWh in May. The
decline in generation charge largely contributed to a lower June overall rate
by P1.43 per kWh to P8.17 per kWh.
At P8.17 per kWh, the
June overall rate is the second lowest since December 2009.
Contributing to the
decrease in generation charge for the month of May, which is reflected in the
June electricity bills, are the P0.59-per-kWh decrease in the cost
of power sourced from independent power producers (IPPs), the P1.25-per-kWh
decrease in power sourced from the WESM and the P0.04-per-kWh decrease in
power-supply agreements (PSAs) prices. There was a reduction in IPP and
PSA costs because of higher plant dispatch, continuous peso appreciation and
the completion of the staggered recovery of liquid fuel cost that was incurred
during the Malampaya maintenance shutdown from January 28 to February 16. The
share of IPPs and PSAs purchases to Meralco’s total requirements
are 40.7 percent and 45.6 percent, respectively, Meralco had
reported.
Additionally, a
decrease in the cost of power supplied through the WESM is due to fewer
plant outages despite higher power demand in Luzon. The share of the WESM stood
at 13.7 percent.
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