December 4, 2017 By Victor V.
Saulon, Sub-Editor
ALSONS Consolidated Resources, Inc.
(ACR) is considering putting up a separate retail electricity supply (RES)
business, although the timing and the decision to do so would largely depend on
its current customers — the distribution utilities.
“All power companies at one point or
another will have to go into RES business. We are preparing for that but our
policy on retail electricity is to do it to the extent that we do not compete
with our utility consumers,” said Joseph C. Nocos, vice-president for business
development at ACR.
For now, the rules on retail
electricity and open access (RCOA) are not applicable to Mindanao because a
wholesale electricity spot market (WESM) is required before the Energy
Regulatory Commission (ERC) will declare the regulation’s applicability on the
southern island. The DoE expects WESM Mindanao to be ready by next year.
Under RCOA, new power industry
players called retail electricity suppliers (RES) take over the power sourcing
function of the distribution utilities to serve electricity end-users issued
with certificates of contestability by the ERC.
A RES will be able to access
transmission and distribution systems so that they can offer electricity deals
to contestable customers, or those whose electricity use has reached the
thresholds set by the ERC. Contestable customers have the choice on which
supplier best suits their electricity needs.
Retail competition is believed to
result in lowering the price of electricity as sellers try to find ways to
attract business.
Mr. Nocos said Mindanao’s situation
is different largely because one of its biggest energy source is the
Agus-Pulangi hydroelectric complex, which is a cheaper power source.
“I believe that contestable customers
currently would be better off staying with their utilities. Why? Because the
utilities have access to NPC (National Power Corp.) hydro. It’s unique to
Mindanao,” he said.
“If they go with a RES, unless that
RES is a RES that has access to a portfolio of power plants with baseload,
intermediate, peaking and reserve capacity, they will be stuck with just one
technology, with one plant,” he said.
However, he said if that plant goes
down for maintenance, the contestable customer would have to go to the “supplier
of last resort,” which charges higher electricity costs.
Mr. Nocos said utilities in Mindanao
currently enjoy “NPC rates, which has the effect of averaging down the cost of
power.”
A RES, on the other hand, is subject
to the cost of a single power source, say coal, which is also subject to the
volatility of the fuel price.
“If you’re a cement plant, or you’re
a steel plant, you would want to have a firm idea of what your power cost is
going to be and where you’re going to be drawing your power from,” he said.
“So, to that point, given these
considerations in Mindanao, I believe that it might be more advantageous for
the large consumers, the contestable consumers, to be given the choice not to
be obligated to these rules,” he added.
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