Published
By Myrna M. Velasco
In less than a year,
the market operator of the Wholesale Electricity Spot Market (WESM) is having
its second president in Engineer Jose Mari T. Bigornia, replacing lawyer
Francis Saturnino Juan whose term at the Independent Electricity Market Operator
of the Philippines (IEMOP) had been cut short to April 30 this year.
Bigornia is currently
the Chief Operating Officer (COO) of the IEMOP and formerly a member of the
WESM governance committee. With the leadership change, long-time executive
Robinson P. Descanzo has also been named the new COO.
The management shakeup
transpired following the WESM market operator-firm’s board meeting on April 23
– and after the reported audit undertaken by the Department of Energy. The
outcome of that audit had not been made public yet, although, it was hinted to
the media that it was just about assessing the performance of the spot market
in the past year.
One of the major
concerns raised on the leadership changeover was reportedly the desire of the
outgoing IEMOP President to make the market operator truly independent – but
this ended up exasperating some personalities who have not actually designed
the WESM to become an “independent entity” – instead, for it to be operating
still under the shadows of government’s control.
The choice set-up of
independent market operator (IMO) of the WESM has been raising some questions
because this diverted from the strategy adopted by other electricity spot
markets in other parts of the world.
Conversely in other
jurisdictions, spot markets tapped financially capable entities so they can operate
on their own without depending solely on the fees being paid by the trading
participants (or the buyers and sellers in the spot market). That way, they are
also able to exercise independence not just from the government regulators and
policymakers but also from the industry players.
The IMO installation
for the Philippine WESM was institutionalized June last year – and Juan was
among the prime movers in the transition phase. It did not last long for him
though to see how the market should have transformed and matured under an
independent operator. Juan formally submitted his resignation this week.
The power spot market
has been going through reform processes – including its trading platform under
the ambit of a new market management system (NMMS) which it has been targeting
to be concretized around October this year. The market operator is also
pursuing the establishment of WESM in Mindanao, so it can serve as alternative
market to capacities that are not yet contracted in the grid.
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