Danessa Rivera (The Philippine Star)
- October 13, 2019 - 12:00am
MANILA, Philippines — State-run
National Electrification Administration (NEA) will prioritize giving subsidy
allocation to electric cooperatives (EC) with low electrification rate next
year.
NEA administrator Edgardo Masongsong
said the subsidy would be taken out from the proposed corporate operating
budget (COB) of the agency for fiscal year 2020 based on the National
Expenditure Program (NEP).
Based on the 2020 NEP, the NEA was
given a P14.15-billion corporate operating budget. Of the amount, P1.75 billion
will be financed by NEA’s internally generated funds, P1.53 billion as subsidy
from the national government (NG), and the remaining P10.87 billion represents
non-cash subsidy for the conversion of NG advances.
Of the total proposed budget, P1.162
billion has been warmarked for the continuation of the Sitio Electrification
Program (SEP) next year, which will only cover 775 sitios across the country
that still have no access to electricity.
To determine which power coop should
be prioritized in the sitio electrification fund, the agency has established a
set of criteria.
Masongsong said ECs with
electrification level of 74 percent and below, and with good project
liquidation performance would be given the bulk of the subsidy allocation next
year.
Other criteria factored in are power
coops with problems on peace and order, financial liquidity, and those
classified as “medium” and below.
“Electric cooperatives with
energization level ranging 95 percent and above, based on the 2015 census
without growth rate, shall be the least priority for allocation,” he said.
These ECs will be required to scout
potential private investors for a joint venture, and international and local
grants and programs, utilize their internally generated funds, and/or include
in capital expenditure (capex) project application to the Energy Regulatory
Commission (ERC).
“All other electric cooperatives
which do not fall on the two categories shall be allotted with funding according
to the degree of impact to the level of energization and least cost,”
Masongsong said.
Meanwhile, the NEA chief also noted
that of the P34.375 billion worth of government subsidies released to the ECs
from 2011 to 2019, a total of P31.55 billion were already liquidated and only
P2.82 billion remained unliquidated.
NEA has also committed to submit the
masterplan detailing the agency’s strategies to help the national government
realize the 100-percent electrification target by 2022.
Masongsong assured that the agency,
in partnership with 121 ECs, would continue to explore and exhaust other means,
as well as maximize national government subsidies for sitio electrification and
barangay line enhancement programs, and grants and donations both from foreign
and local institutions.
Next year’s proposed budget will
allow the agency to meet its other targets for 2020, which include
electrification of 38 local government unit/non-government organizations
(LGU/NGOs) resettlement sites, and provision for the cost counterpart of the
government of the Philippines on Japan International Cooperation Agency
donation for ECs in the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao.
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