Published July 29, 2017, 10:00 PM By Myrna M.
Velasco
The regulator-approved hike in the universal
charges of Power Sector Assets and Liabilities Management Corporation (PSALM)
will likely drive up electric bills of Filipino consumers in August billing
month.
That as the Energy Regulatory
Commission (ERC) had finally approved the true-up adjustments in the universal
charges for stranded debts (UC-SD) of PSALM amounting to P24.198 billion
covering cost recoveries over the 2011-2012 stretch.
In separate line item in the
electric bills, that shall amount to P0.0265 per kilowatt-hour (kWh), according
to PSALM. The ERC order on this was dated July 7 this year but had just been
formally issued recently.
“The collection will be spread over
a nine-year period with a rate of P0.0265 per kWh,” the state-run company has
reiterated, emphasizing that the UC-SD will start manifesting in the consumers’
bills in the August billing period.
That will be on top of the
additional collections that the company will recoup for UC on stranded contract
costs (UC-SCC). And when both universal charge cost recoveries would be
consolidated, they could reach as high to P37 billion.
For the UC on stranded contract
costs in particular, the supplemental collections given go-signal by the ERC
had been at P12.878 billion – for cost recoveries on calendar years 2011, 2012
and 2013.
“PSALM was ordered to extend its
collection for another 10 months,” the company has noted, relative to its
pass-on of UC-SCC in the electric bills.
As explained, the amount shall “be
recovered at the existing UC-SCC rate, thus, there is no increase or decrease
in the UC-SCC rate for the 10-month collection is only an extension.”
Depending on the swing of other rate
components in the bills for August, the UC hikes may still be offset,
especially if the generation charges had eased from the last supply month.
PSALM further indicated to media
that “the impending collection of the stranded debt and stranded contract cost
portions of the universal charge in the amount of around P37 billion will
relieve PSALM from additional borrowings this year.”
PSALM Officer-in-Charge Lourdes S.
Alzona opined that “early recovery of said charges will partially infuse the
needed monetary source to pay maturing obligations without resorting to
financing.”
She stressed that had the state-run
firm been pushed into fresh round of loan procurements, such could just have
been “a palliative solution that further widens PSALM’s stranded debts in the
long run because of refinancing charges.”
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