Published
By Myrna M. Velasco
The well-anticipated
ingress of the Independent Market Operator (IMO) of the Wholesale Electricity
Spot Market (WESM) targeted as early as February this year will also prompt the
eventual exit of Energy Secretary Alfonso G. Cusi as chairman of the board of
the Philippine Electricity Market Corporation (PEMC).
That will similarly
signal the end of the government’s grip over the interconnected electricity
spot market of Luzon and Visayas grids.
When asked on this
matter, PEMC transition committee Chief Operating Officer Francis Saturnino
Juan indicated that “it is part of the plan” as presented to industry
stakeholders and relative to the IMO Transition Plan submitted to the
Department of Energy.
And according to the
industry players who have consistently attended all public hearings of the IMO
formation for the spot market, the proposed takeover of the Philippine Stock
Exchange (PSE) on to manning WESM’s operations had been clarified and
definitively communicated to them that it is “not part of the plan” – at least
based on the submitted IMO blueprint that was subjected to public
consultations.
Government double speak
and industry confusion happened though when Cusi made pronouncements to the
media that the proposal will be up “for study.”
Under the officially
proposed transition plan, it was stated that an IMO company shall be initially
incorporated and organized as “a non-stock, non-profit corporation under the
Corporation Code of the Philippines.” It will be up to the IMO firm then to
have it reconstituted into a for-profit entity as industry circumstances
warrant.
It was emphasized that
the IMO firm “will be incorporated as a private company, and will have no
representation from the government as well as from the electric industry
participants.” This is still a process that must be initiated by the DOE and
the PEM Board.
Following the
incorporation and official entry of the IMO company into the industry’s fold,
the next step will be to work on the Market Rules modifications that shall also
take into account the re-organization of the PEM Board as governance and
oversight body of the power spot market. On taking that step, its board
membership will already change to mostly from industry players and selected
independent directors.
“The PEM Board members
will then be elected in accordance with the WESM Rules as well as the PEMC
by-laws and will no longer be appointed by the DOE, the IMO transition plan has
set out. The President of the IMO firm will also be its representative to the
PEM Board.
With the mandated
restructuring of the spot market, it was expounded that “the DOE ceases to have
any participation in the PEM Board,” and that “the chairmanship of the
Secretary is only intended to be interim in nature.”
The IMO company is
targeted for incorporation this month or up to February so it can keep pace
with the timelines set forth in the plan. Targets may encounter delays though
because the IMO Plan was not tackled in the PEM board meeting last December.
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