Published February 13, 2019, 10:00
PM By Myrna
M. Velasco
When the propounded legislation
authorizing the use of the Malampaya fund to retire power sector debts will
finally be enacted into law, state-run Power Sector Assets and Liabilities
Management Corporation (PSALM) will be asked to withdraw its pending
applications for universal charges (UCs) entailing pass-on of up to P113.139 billion
in the consumers electric bills.
The government-run firm has three
pending cost recovery applications with the Energy Regulatory Commission (ERC)
for universal charges for stranded contract costs (UC-SCC) totaling P16.269
billion.
For UC on stranded debts (UC-SD),
PSALM has five pending petitions with the industry regulator for a whopping
P96.870 billion.
The universal charges line items in
the consumers’ electric bills have “upward adjustment effect” on the overall
tariff they have been paying for on a monthly basis; thus, Congress opted for
the use of the Malampaya to fully retire these PSALM liabilities.
Senate Committee on Energy Chairman
Sherwin T. Gatchalian said “if the law will be approved, PSALM will need to
withdraw its applications from the ERC, because there’s no more need for it
when the Malampaya fund is applied to retire the universal charges.”
During the proposed law’s
deliberations, he noted that they have seen the UC rate components still going
up to the level of P0.82 to P0.83 per kilowatt hour (kWh) from P0.22 per kWh
currently, but since the Malampaya fund will already be earmarked to fund
PSALM’s deficit on these obligations, the consumers will already be spared from
paying the adjustments until the end of the state-owned power company’s life
cycle in 2026.
“We saw the cash flow, so in the
next six years, PSALM will have huge deficit and that deficit should have been
covered by us consumers through our universal charge payments. But that will no
longer be a responsibility for the consumers if the Murang Kuryente Act becomes
a law,” the lawmaker explained.
The yearly allotment of Malampaya
fund to cover PSALM’s deficit relating to UCs will be done via the General
Appropriations Act (GAA).
And since the fund is reported to
just be leaning on “book entry” at this point and there’s really no cash that
can be easily pulled out from it, Gatchalian noted that the Department of
Finance (DOF) can tap borrowings to cover cost on PSALM’s deficit, but that
shall be charged against the Malampaya fund.
“They (PSALM) are proposing to
borrow anyway to fund their deficit, so we can let DOF borrow, but the
consumers will no longer shoulder that in their bills,” Gatchalian averred.
Congress is authorizing the
utilization of P207 billion worth from the Malampaya fund to cover financial
obligations of PSALM that have rate-hike impact on its universal charges owing
to stranded liabilities.
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