Published May 5, 2019, 10:00 PM By Myrna M.
Velasco
The Energy Regulatory Commission
(ERC) has found several power generation companies (GenCos) violating industry
rules, including non-submission of plant outage reports, hence regulatory
penalties will likely be meted against them.
ERC Commissioner Catherine P. Maceda
sounded off in the investigation of the Joint Congressional Power Commission
(JCPC) that many GenCos are “pasaway” (stubborn) – and she was referring to
acts of the power firms that may be up for the industry regulator’s reprimand.
Nevertheless, she qualified that
penalties or sanctions will not just be imposed upon them without first going
through the requisite due process of law and proper rules’ enforcements. Maceda
said she cannot name yet the erring GenCos, because their alleged violations are
still up for deliberations of the commission en banc.
“Those (GenCos) that will not comply
will be penalized, but of course with due process. There will be sheer
penalties after the reports,” she told reporters.
Aside from non-submission of outage reports, Maceda further indicated that many power supply agreements (PSAs) between GenCos and distribution utilities (DUs) do not have provision for replacement power, hence, that will be part of the regulatory fix that the Commission will be working on.
Aside from non-submission of outage reports, Maceda further indicated that many power supply agreements (PSAs) between GenCos and distribution utilities (DUs) do not have provision for replacement power, hence, that will be part of the regulatory fix that the Commission will be working on.
Over at the Philippine Competition
Commission (PCC), Executive Director Kenneth V. Tanate emphasized that their
next move will be to require the operator of the Wholesale Electricity Spot
Market (WESM) to submit a report on revenues generated by GenCo-trading participants
on the periods when yellow and red alerts were happening in Luzon grid.
“We will require submission up to
the point that there’s available data because it will be worth examining those
figures – we might need these to determine collusion or anti-competitive
behavior,” he said.
According to Philippine Electricity
Market Corporation (PEMC) Chief Governance Officer Rauf A. Tan, the figures on
the GenCo revenues will be available 15 days from the end of the April 26
billing cycle – so they are expecting that to be turned over to PCC by mid-May.
PEMC has oversight role over the operations of the WESM.
The PCC has also recommended the
creation of a task force so they can closely coordinate with the ERC and the
Department of Energy (DOE) as well as with PEMC in the investigation of any
alleged “market gaming”, anti-competitive behavior or abuse of market power
that may have happened during the tight supply cycle in the country’s major
power grid.
“There’s a formal request from DOE
and ERC for close coordination and the possible creation of a task force on
inquiries on the power outages,” Tanate said.
But in the core of investigating any
alleged violations while the forced outages in power plants have been causing
brownouts, the PCC opined that it shall be its mandate that must be followed in
the probe process.
“We have the primary and original
jurisdiction on competition concerns, so I hope that (investigation) will fall
upon us…that’s also the purpose of the MOA (memorandum of agreement) – to
clarify our mandate and delineate our roles,” the PCC official stressed. Such
mandate had been prescribed under Sections 14, 15 and 17 of the Philippine
Competition Act, the law that created the PCC.
Tanate qualified that there was
already a draft MOA. “We hope to have that signed sooner and we actually have a
letter to the DOE and ERC for close coordination between us regarding the
fact-finding on these outages.”
No comments:
Post a Comment