By Danessa Rivera (The
Philippine Star) | Updated July 29, 2017 - 12:00am
MANILA, Philippines -
State-run Power Sector Assets and Liabilities Management Corp. (PSALM)
has received regulatory approval to recover over P21 billion from consumers in
Luzon and Visayas for fuel, purchased power and foreign exchange-related costs
incurred from 2007 until 2014.
The Energy Regulatory Commission
(ERC) allowed PSALM to recover P21.47 billion, which includes the
P15.55-billion deferred accounting adjustments (DAA) generation rate adjustment
mechanism (GRAM); P2.88-billion DAA on incremental currency exchange rate
adjustment (ICERA); and the P3.04-billion true-up adjustments under the
automatic cost recovery mechanism (ACRM).
The state-run firm said the approved
cost adjustments would be recovered from customers who drew power from National
Power Corp. (Napocor)/PSALM during test periods from 2007 to 2014.
Luzon and Visayas customers will
have to pay more for 60 months or five years effective next billing
period.
On the other hand, Mindanao
customers should expect a refund from PSALM amounting to a total P7.58 billion
over the five-year implementation period.
PSALM said the P21.47-billion
approved cost recoveries would in part address funding requirements for the
servicing of its maturing debts, which is fitting considering that costs being
recovered were funded from financial obligations during the test periods.
The ERC had also previously allowed
PSALM to collect P37 billion from consumers under the stranded debt (SD) and
stranded contract cost (SCC) portions of the universal charge (UC).
This impending collection will
relieve the state-run firm from additional borrowings this year.
“Early recovery of said
charges will partially infuse the needed monetary source to pay maturing
obligations without resorting to refinancing. Contracting further loans is only
a palliative solution that further widens PSALM’s stranded debts in the long
run because of refinancing charges,” PSALM officer-in-charge, Lourdes Alzona
said.
The SD and SCC charges are purposely
intended to pay the remaining financial obligations that the government
incurred when new power plants were constructed to end the power crisis that
engulfed the whole country particularly in the 1990s and early 2000.
PSALM continues to incur SD and SCC
because the proceeds from privatization of Napocor/independent power producer
generation assets and the revenue generated from the Napocor-owned and IPP
plants are not enough to pay its contractual obligations with the eligible IPPs
and lending institutions.
“The collection of UC-SD and
SCC should be appreciated for its social inclusion value. Let’s look at it as a
necessary contribution for the stable and quality supply of electricity we had
enjoyed in the past and continue to enjoy nowadays,” Alzona said.
The Electric Power Industry Reform
Act (EPIRA) defines SD as “any unpaid financial obligations of the Napocor
which have not been liquidated by the proceeds from the sales and privatization
of Napocor assets.”
On the other hand, the EPIRA defines
UC-SCC as the “excess of the contracted cost of electricity under eligible
contracts over the actual selling price of the contracted energy.”
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