Published
By Myrna M. Velasco
Instead of rupturing
the exclusivity of franchise for power utilities to broaden the deployment of
renewable energy (RE) technologies like solar, majority of the local and
foreign investors are instead batting for the passage of a Philippine Mini-Grid
Law.
Prospective RE project
sponsors – including those affiliated with the Renewable Association of the
Philippines (REAP) and the Philippine Independent Power Producers Association,
Inc. (PIPPA) – have acknowledged though that this proposed legislation is still
under conceptualization phase, hence, further collaboration among relevant
stakeholders is being pushed.
According to PIPPA
Managing Director Anne Estorco-Macias, the propounded mini-grid law is the
preferred policy and regulation frame of many investors to attract fresh
capital flow in the country’s RE sector.
RE investors are against the push for a non-exclusive franchise that in essence
may only be benefitting one player in the industry and may also strain existing
regulations of the restructured electricity sector.
Hence, for fairness and
transparency, the industry players are batting for a legislation that will then
guide all investors equally in the sector.
Even in the
international sphere, however, regulation and policy frames for mini-grids have
remained a “complex terrain – with various countries taking RE technology
deployments adopting diverging mechanisms into incentivizing investments.
A mini-grid – which is
also referred to as “micro grid or isolated grid” is an electricity system
interconnected with a distribution network and servicing the needs of localized
customers. This could also be interwoven with other technologies, such as
battery storage systems.
As stipulated by Abu Dhabi-based International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA),
“countries have adopted a range of approaches to the development of
mini-grids,” adding that “existing regulations have often been inadequate to de-risk
and finance such investments.”
In other countries,
among the key considerations in drawing up mini-gird policy toolbox include
legal and licensing provisions; financial support; quality standards and
eventual grid interconnection.
And on the domain of regulation, concerns are also being addressed on cross-sector linkages; tariff setting and even the enforcement of technical standards.
And on the domain of regulation, concerns are also being addressed on cross-sector linkages; tariff setting and even the enforcement of technical standards.
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