By:
Daxim L. Lucas 05:16 AM September 24, 2018
An alliance of
renewable energy industry associations has opposed a bill in Congress that
will, according to the group, create a monopoly to a new firm set up by Leandro
Leviste, son of Sen. Loren Legarda.
In a statement, the
Philippine Solar and Storage Energy Alliance Inc. (PSSEA) said House Bill
8179—authored by Bohol Rep. Arthur Yap—aimed to grant a nationwide franchise to
Solar Para Sa Bayan.
In particular, the
group said the bill would give the firm the ability to “capture the entire
electric power value chain (generation, transmission, distribution and supply)
with no limitation as to the capacity of the systems it can install or the
service area it will cover.”
“With over five million
Filipinos still living without electricity and with the increasing impact of
climate change, there is absolutely no justifiable reason for our policymakers
and legislators to restrict the expanding renewable energy industry from
developing solar, wind, hydro and biomass as sources of energy that will bring
light to missionary areas throughout the country,” the group said.
PSSEA highlighted its “grave dismay” that House Bill 8179 granted Leviste’s firm
the right to access any transmission or distribution system without any
reciprocal obligation on its part, specifically compliance to existing and
relevant laws and rules.
The group further
pointed out that no franchise obligation, during its franchise term, was
imposed on Solar Para Sa Bayan to ensure full electrification for all.
The group also pointed
to the lack of regulation surrounding Solar Para Sa Bayan if House Bill 8179
became law.
“Despite all fiscal and tax incentives provided in the proposed franchise,
there is nothing in the House bill that regulates the activities of Solar Para
Sa Bayan,” the group said. “There are no impositions on performance or service
requirements that would ensure the achievement of its objective to provide
electricity in unserved and un-energized localities.”
“More alarming is the
provision exempting Solar Para Sa Bayan from the regulatory powers of the
Energy Regulatory Commission,” it added.
The statement was
released by the Philippine Solar and Energy Storage Alliance, together with the
Organization of Socialized Housing Developers of the Philippines (OSHDP),
Center for Renewable Energy and Science & Technology (CREST), Renewable
Energy Association of the Philippines (REAP), and Confederation of Solar
Developers in the Philippines (CSDP).
The group said its members “are deeply troubled and alarmed by House Bill 8179
because it effectively grants a monopoly and exempts one private company from
the rules of competition and oversight provided under Epira and the RE Act.”
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