Published
By Myrna M. Velasco
The commercial
operations of the Wholesale Electricity Spot Market (WESM) in Mindanao will be
pushed to first half of next year, according to the Department of Energy (DOE)
and the Independent Electricity Market Operator of the Philippines.
Energy Assistant
Secretary Redentor Delola said “we are hopeful that the preparations will be
completed by first semester of 2019,” adding that such process shall already
include the approval of the Energy Regulatory Commission (ERC) of the spot
market’s price determination methodology (PDM).
The energy official
noted that the WESM in Mindanao has been helping entice power investments in
the grid – especially for capacity additions that will meet demand growth
between now until 2025.
The department, he added, has been closely coordinating with relevant industry stakeholders – primarily the market operator and the National Grid Corporation of the Philippines (NGCP), on matters like registration of participants; capacity building; and installation of monitoring, communication and other interfaces necessary for a seamless trading in the market.
The department, he added, has been closely coordinating with relevant industry stakeholders – primarily the market operator and the National Grid Corporation of the Philippines (NGCP), on matters like registration of participants; capacity building; and installation of monitoring, communication and other interfaces necessary for a seamless trading in the market.
For the Luzon and
Visayas spot markets, WESM is entering its new life cycle as its commercial
operations now roll under independent market operator IEMOP. On the strength of
an Operating Agreement, the newly minted market operator was formally carved
out last September 26 from the restructured Philippine Electricity Market
Corporation (PEMC), which has also taken on a new role to become the spot
market’s governing body.
According to IEMOP
President Francis Saturnino C. Juan, their existence and service as a fresh
entity will “usher in the electricity market’s inevitable transformation to a
more competitive state for the ultimate benefit of the electricity consumers.”
It has been a
more-than-a-decade stream of transformation, and now that the independent
market operator is finally taking the reigns of the WESM, consumers and market
participants alike have been aiming for further improvements — not just in
WESM’s processes but in the long-aspired for reduction in electricity rates.
As Juan noted, “the
IEMOP fulfills the promise of EPIRA to foster competition in the WESM through
an independent market operator.”
Core of the spot market
operator’s functions shall include facilitating the registration and
participation of generating companies; distribution utilities; directly
connected customers or bulk users; suppliers and contestable customers in the
WESM – or those in the retail competition and open access (RCOA) regime of
competitive phase in the market.
The WESM likewise
establishes the hourly schedules of generating units that will supply
electricity to the grid – and shall also process the corresponding traded
prices via the market management system (MMS) or the IT-enabled platform of the
spot market.
Further, the market
operator will manage the metering, billing, settlement and collection of spot
trading amounts corresponding to the service it must deliver to market
participants.
The WESM is also
heading into its transformative phase of having a new market management system
(NMMS), of which trial phase is still being perfected according to the expected
functionalities of the market and its participants.
In carrying out its
mandate as spot market operator, IEMOP noted that it is “bound to strictly
comply” with the Electric Power Industry Reform Act (EPIRA) and its
implementing rules and regulations, the WESM Rules as well as the other related
issuances of the Department of Energy.
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