By Danessa Rivera (The
Philippine Star) | Updated January 31, 2018 - 12:00am
MANILA, Philippines — Manila
Electric Co. (Meralco) expects electricity rates to go up next month as
capacity fees from power generators start to normalize along with factors
pushing up the generation charge.
“We may recall that the January
generation charge reduction was largely due to lower capacity fees following
the annual reconciliation of outage allowances. As in prior years, we expect
capacity fees of PSAs (power supply agreements) to normalize in February,”
Meralco head of utility economics Lawrence Fernandez said.
Capacity fees are determined through
the annual reconciliation of outage allowances done at the end of each year
under the contracts approved by the Energy Regulatory Commission.
For instance, if power generators do
not exceed their outage allowance, their capacity fees are already paid in full
and would no longer be reflected for the month of January.
The normalization of capacity fees
will push up the generation charge, Fernandez said.
“Hence, we see an uptick in the
generation charge next month, though we still need to await final supplier
bills to see the effect of such factors as WESM (wholesale electricity spot
market) charges, forex (foreign exchange) rate, fuel prices and others,” he
said.
Also driving Meralco rates higher is
the impact of the implementation of the Tax Reform for Acceleration and
Inclusion (TRAIN) law.
Earlier, Fernandez said electricity
rates would be pushed up by the implementation of the coal excise tax and the
removal of the value added tax (VAT) exemption of the National Grid Corp of the
Philippines (NGCP) under TRAIN.
Under Republic Act 9511, NGCP was
exempted from paying income tax and VAT. This was repealed in Section 86 of the
TRAIN, subjecting NGCP to the VAT provision under the National Internal Revenue
Code.
Based on Meralco’s computation, the
VAT on transmission charge would translate to an additional seven centavo per
kilowatt-hour in its rates, Fernandez said.
For the impact of the coal excise
tax, Meralco is awaiting the response of suppliers to compute the increase in
electricity rates but it has estimated an additional one centavo per kwh at P50
per metric ton.
Under the TRAIN Law, what was
approved was a lower coal excise tax of P50 per metric ton in 2018, P100 in
2019, and P150 in 2020 compared with the original Senate proposal of a
“100-200-300” hike scheme.
However, the Department of Energy
(DOE) said the impact of coal excise tax on electricity rates is expected to
reflect on consumers’ electricity bills during the summer season.
This is because coal plant
generators maintain coal reserves good for at least 30 days, DOE Undersecretary
Felix William Fuentebella said earlier.
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