Danessa Rivera (The Philippine Star)
- May 22, 2019 - 12:00am
MANILA, Philippines — Power
distribution utilities (DUs) should start undertaking competitive bidding for
the power supply agreements (PSAs) affected by the Supreme Court decision, the
Department of Energy said.
The agency will call Manila Electric
Co. (Meralco) and other affected stakeholders to a meeting to direct them to
undergo CSP, DOE assistant secretary Redentor Delola said in an interview
during the Future Energy Show Philippines 2019.
He said the PSAs with power plants
that have yet to build should immediately conduct competitive bidding once the
new rules are out.
“We will have a meeting with
Meralco, with all of the stakeholders this week. We will tell them to conduct
CSP,” Delola said.
The Energy Regulatory Commission
(ERC) is currently finalizing the rules on CSP, including a format for PSAs for
all power players to follow to secure supply in the grid and to protect
consumers from sudden spikes in power rates.
The recent SC decision invalidated
all PSAs signed after Nov. 7, 2015, the original implementation of the CSP
policy which requires distribution utilities and electric cooperatives to
undertake competitive bidding to secure PSAs with generation companies.
Instead, the CSP policy was
implemented on April 30, 2016 to give power players a transition period to
comply.
This includes the over
3,500-megawatt (MW) supply secured by Meralco with several generating
companies, including subsidiary Meralco Power Gen Corp., which covers 70
percent of the over 90 contracts with an estimated combined 5,000-MW capacity
affected by the SC decision.
However, out of the over 90
contracts hit by the CSP directive, there are contracts that are already in
effect.
“The issue really is on those
contracts that are operating,” Delola said.
“But it will not really affect
supply since these power plants are already operating. Instead, they can supply
through WESM (wholesale electricity spot market) so there won’t be any supply
disruption,” he said.
But Sen. Sherwin Gatchalian said
there are emergency situations that can can trigger an emergency purchase.
The lawmaker said the ERC would be
the one to determine whether the PSAs can be closed through negotiations as
this is part of their rate setting.
“They have to evaluate carefully if
it will fall under what we call emergency cases because not all can be categorized
as emergency cases, that they can now skip bidding,” Gatchalian said.
“If these are determined to be
emergency cases and that they can go into bilateral negotiations, those
contracts should only be short-term contracts, and it will just bridge the time
CSP can be implemented,” he said.
Gatchalian said the bilateral
contract should only last from 30 days to a maximum of six months to bridge the
gap that will be caused by the ongoing CSP process.
The whole CSP process usually takes
up to six months, that’s why Gatchalian urged the DOE to shorten it to 30 to 45
days.
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