May 13, 2019 | 12:08 am
THE Energy Regulatory
Commission (ERC) said it is reviewing the number of unscheduled outages that
power plants are permitted over a year, which will seek to benchmark against
the outage rate allowed in other jurisdictions have adopted.
ERC Commissioner
Catherine P. Maceda said the agency has reviewed existing power supply
agreements (PSAs) and it has provisions on outage allowance under the contracts
forged between generation companies and distribution utilities.
“But we feel na
’yung beyond the outage allowance na nakalagay sa mga kontrata ay ’yun
ho siguro karapat-dapat lang na hindi i-charge sa consumer kun’di
du’n sa genco na hindi nakapag-deliver,” she said.
(But we feel that those
that exceeded the outage allowance under the contract should not be charged on
consumers, but on the generating company that failed to deliver.)
At present, the
obligation to provide replacement power depends on the provisions of the PSA
between a distribution utility and a generation company, and on the kind of
outage that occurred.
The duration of the
outage allowance in a year is also agreed between the contracting parties,
including those for planned and unplanned outages.
Based on the ERC
review, the maximum outage allowance ranges from 45 to 60 days on an annual
basis. The agreed PSAs also provide for the cost arrangements if the outage is
within the agreed number or beyond.
“We’ve mapped out all
these contracts,” Ms. Maceda said.
The result of the
review will be used in the rules on competitive selection process, which the
ERC is drafting. Annexed to that draft is a template on PSAs.
“[The template will
have] the minimum provisions that we expect to find in a power supply
agreement, including provisions for replacement power, including provisions for
how much allowance should ideally be,” she said, adding that the rules will
include provisions on penalties.
“It’s ERC actually that
can impose such sanctions and penalties,” she said.
“Again this is a
template. The parties concerned under a free market principle are free to
negotiate the specific terms of their agreement. But definitely, hindi na po
manghuhula kung ano ang outage allowance na dapat i-develop. (there
will be no guesswork involved in estimating the outage allowance) There’s
already a basis,” Ms. Maceda said. — Victor V. Saulon
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