By Lenie Lectura - July 24,
2017
The National Renewable Energy Board
(NREB) has created a committee to focus on coming up with the best option on
how solar providers who were not able to avail themselves of the feed-in-tariff
(FiT) can move forward.
“At the NREB level, we created a
committee to create options on stranded solar, on what alternatives could be
availed [of],” NREB Chairman Jose Layug Jr. said.
Among the options that could be
considered are, “maybe, another round of bidding or public auction, though not
necessarily in the form of FiT”. Also, he cited, “a subsidy scheme based on
marginal cost so they can continue to operate without shutting down”. The
committee, he said, is currently working on the numbers in its proposal before
this is presented to the Department of Energy (DOE). “Then we submit this to
the DOE for approval,” Layug said.
The NREB is the advisory body tasked
for the effective implementation of renewable-energy (RE)projects in the
country. The DOE is the agency that crafts the policy for the RE sector.
Meanwhile, the Energy Regulatory Commission (ERC) sets the FiT rates.
Under the FiT system, RE developers
of emerging renewable sources are offered a fixed rate per kilowatt-hour (kWh)
of their exported electricity.
In July 2011 the DOE approved a
solar-installation target of 50 megawatts (MW), to which the Energy Regulatory
Commission (ERC) granted a guaranteed FiT rate of P9.68 per kWh. When the DOE
increased the target in April 2014 to 500 MW, the ERC lowered the rate to P8.69
per kWh.
The new rate is applicable until the
target is reached, but only for projects that qualified on March 15, 2016.
However, the installation target was
oversubscribed by 390 MW. Energy Secretary Alfonso G. Cusi has already declared
that he will no longer allow another round of FiT being sought by RE
developers, particularly by solar players that failed to qualify in the second
round of solar FiT. A majority of the “stranded” solar farms without a
guaranteed FiT were built in Negros where the transmission facility is unable
to handle the new power capacity.
“For the solar developers of the 390
MW excess capacity, you know the rules when you participated. If you don’t
qualify, you should know your options…and your options are, either the spot
market or bilateral contracts,” Cusi had said. “That’s enough of the FIT
for solar.”
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