By: Hazel P. Villa, Nestor P. Burgos
Jr. - 05:16 AM May 08, 2019
ILOILO CITY, ILOILO, Philippines —
Those were hard times in the 1920s for a 42-year-old Filipino woman who lost
her husband but had to feed 11 children and send them to school.
Candelaria Cacho sold almost
anything she could lay her hands on, including bananas and fiber to traders in
ships docking at the thriving Port of Iloilo.
She made enough money to acquire
what would become her family’s heirloom, Panay Electric Co. (Peco), the sole
power distributor in Iloilo City.
Ninety-two years later, however,
Peco is on the brink of shutting down; its franchise already expired on Jan.
18, 2019.
As if sealing the company’s doom,
More Electric and Power Corp. (More Power), a new firm controlled by
billionaire Enrique Razon Jr., has acquired the 25-year franchise granted under
Republic Act No. 11212. The law was signed on Feb. 14.
Losing everything
The Cachos are not giving up Peco,
though, and have brought the fight to the courts. After all, they stand to lose
everything, especially the authority to bring power to at least 64,000
consumers in Iloilo City.
On March 12, Peco secured a
temporary restraining order (TRO) from the Mandaluyong Regional Trial Court
(RTC) against the enforcement of More Power’s franchise, which gave the new
player authority to seize Peco assets. The Court of Appeals, however, issued
its own TRO in favor of More Power to stop the RTC order.
In an apparent retaliatory move,
More Power filed an expropriation case against Peco in the Iloilo RTC seeking a
writ of possession against Peco assets. Peco, in turn, filed a petition to
suspend the expropriation proceedings until the legality of the franchise
granted to More Power is resolved by the courts.
Peco has described its opponent’s
takeover bid as “high-handed” and “reminiscent of the era of kings and robber
barons.”
It came after talks between Razon
and the Cacho family collapsed in 2017, according to a source privy to the
negotiations. Razon, the source said, had offered to buy a controlling share in
Peco but the family insisted that any discussion should come only after the
renewal of its franchise.
Franchise renewal
On July 31, 2017, a bill seeking to
renew Peco’s franchise was filed in the House of Representatives, but it was
not tackled by the committee on legislative franchises.
When former President and Pampanga
Rep. Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo assumed the speakership in July 2018, legislative
action was swift. A bill was filed two months later, or on Sept. 26, 2018,
awarding a 25-year franchise to More Power controlled by Razon, a known close
ally of Arroyo.
In just 12 calendar days, House
members passed the bill. Senators, meanwhile, approved the Senate version of
the measure. The bicameral committee agreed on the consolidated bill in December
last year, which was eventually signed by President Duterte on Feb. 14.
The law provides a maximum two-year
transition period for More Power but also allowed it to seize Peco assets.
Roel Castro, the company president,
said More Power was ready to take over power distribution if Peco would discuss
the transition. It was also willing to offer “just compensation” to Peco for
its assets and facilities.
Assets
According to Peco, its assets
included five subtransmission line substations, 450 kilometers of electrical
lines, 20,000 poles, 1,300 distribution transformers, 64,000 electrical meters
and more than 400 personnel.
Mikel Afzelius, Peco corporate
communications officer, said that if there would be talks on assets
acquisition, payment should cover losses in prospective income for several
years. Without an agreement, More Power has to put up its own distribution
system, he said.
Peco reported a net income of P142.7
million in 2015 and P202.8 million in 2016, according to financial statements
submitted to the Securities and Exchange Commission.
Despite the expiration of its
franchise, Peco continues to operate under a certificate of public convenience
and necessity issued by the Energy Regulatory Commission and valid until this
month.
More Power plans to infuse P1.2
billion in capital for the three-year rehabilitation program, Castro said. He
promised improved customer care services and lower rates by tapping multiple
sources of power, including a considerable portion from the Wholesale
Electricity Spot Market.
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