Published July 19, 2018, 10:00 PM By Myrna M.
Velasco
With the application of the
Malampaya fund on rate reduction, about P0.70 per kilowatt-hour (kwh) of
universal charges being passed on by Power Sector Assets and Liabilities
Management Corporation (PSALM) will prospectively be wiped out in the electric
bills of Filipino consumers.
This is the stimulating factor then
for the Senate Committee on Energy to fast-track deliberations on a proposed
measure enabling utilization of the Malampaya fund to retire the remaining
liabilities of PSALM.
With the state-run firm’s debts and
stranded liabilities totally expunged from its books, this will result in
avoided cost of P0.70 per kwh for all ratepayers – which in essence, will
redound to power rates reduction.
“It will amount to P0.70 per kwh
reduction, we’ve met with PSALM twice to really crunch the numbers,” Senator
Sherwin T. Gatchalian, who also chairs the Senate energy committee, has noted.
This is one measure, he added,
wherein his committee in the Senate already has its meeting of the mind with
its counterpart body in the Lower House.
The application of the Malampaya fund-anchored
rate reduction will be six to seven years – or until the end of PSALM’s
corporate life in year 2026.
It will be applied on the
P466.1-billion stranded debts and stranded contract costs of PSALM – as
reckoned from the company’s end-2017 financial statements.
Gatchalian said if legislative
proposals will already be approved on the utilization of the Malampaya fund on
rate reduction, PSALM can be spared from filing new applications for universal
charges.
“We will use Malampaya fund for the
next six years to avoid minimum P0.70 per kwh. We’re virtually eliminating
universal charges, except missionary,” the lawmaker said.
The legislative proposal, he said,
will likely be tackled in the Senate floors this year and they are targeting an
enactment of the proposed law at the soonest possible time.
The approved UC rate of PSALM for
stranded contract costs had been at P0.1938 per kWh – that was based on the
last decision rendered by the Energy Regulatory Commission.
In the case of universal charge for
missionary electrification, Gatchalian indicated that it shall be tackled
separately, with proposed rationalization of such subsidy scheme for these
off-grid areas.
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