posted November 29, 2018
at 07:30 pm by Alena Mae S. Flores
Commercial
operations of the Wholesale Electricity Spot Market in Mindanao were delayed to
middle of next year, according to an official of the Independent Electricity
Market Operator of the Philippines.
“Target
[for the start of the operations] is next year, around middle of the year or
thereafter,” IEMOP president Francis Saturnino Juan said.
IEMOP
took over the operations of the Wholesale Electricity Spot Market, the
country’s trading floor of electricity, from Philippine Electricity Market Corp.
in September.
Juan
said WESM Mindanao’s commercial operations were delayed because of the ongoing
software audit of the new market system.
“It
will be the one used for WESM Mindanao,” he said.
Energy
Undersecretary Felix William Fuentebella earlier said there were still some
technicalities that needed to be resolved.
WESM
is a centralized venue for buyers and sellers to trade electricity as a
commodity where its prices are based on actual use (demand) and availability
(supply).
WESM
began commercial operations in Luzon in June 2006 and in the Visayas in
December 2010. It was created under the Electric Power Industry Reform Act of
2001 to reflect the actual cost of electricity and lower power prices through
more efficient production and competition.
Fuentebella
said the New Market Management System for WESM Mindanao remained to be
completed.
“The
system that PEMC is auditing to make it five minute intervals is taking longer
so they are looking at October to make it online and applicable,” he said.
Trial
operations for the integration of the Mindanao grid to the WESM was launched
June last year.
The
trial operations program signaled the start of implementing test cases of a
market-based mechanism for the efficient scheduling, dispatch and settlement of
energy withdrawal and injections in the Mindanao grid.
Mindanao
posted excess generation supply starting 2016 with the entry of 748 megawatts
of new generation capacity. This is expected to increase further by 1,260
MW this year.
Energy
Secretary Alfonso Cusi said the establishment of WESM Mindanao “signals the
start of a competitive electricity market in the region whose costing is very
transparent.”
“WESM
facilitates a transparent electricity market with which Mindanao power
generators will have an avenue to trade un-contracted power supply. WESM will
provide consumers more sources of electricity to choose from, increasing their
chances of lower-priced energy,” he said.
“WESM
Mindanao will enable a transparent and fair mechanism to bring in more
competition, more investors and a sustainable business climate that will
eventually redound to empowering consumers from Mindanao of their power of
choice,” said Cusi.
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