December 25, 2019 | 8:49 pm
THE Department of Energy (DoE) has
issued a circular that will require half of the supply contracted as reserve
power to be on a “firm” basis in which the grid operator has a binding
agreement to source its requirement from a power generation plant.
“Signed na ang AS (ancillary
services) policy. Ipa-publish na lang namin (The ancillary
services policy has been signed. We will shortly publish it),” DoE Assistant
Secretary Redentor E. Delola said.
“We’ll probably publish it in the next
couple of weeks,” he told reporters.
Ancillary services, which generally
refer to power reserves, are necessary to support the transmission of power
capacity and energy from generation sources to consumption loads. These
reserves maintain the reliable operation of the transmission system in line
with good utility practice and the Philippine Grid Code.
The DoE posted in the first quarter
the draft rules setting forth the process of procuring ancillary services,
which is the task of system operator National Grid Corp. of the Philippines
(NGCP).
“We also put contracting caps for
the reserves. Inaayos lang natin ‘yung definition, kung ilang
megawatts per type of reserve, ilang percent of that should be (on a)
firm contract of NGCP,” Mr. Delola said. “Sa draft na nilagay natin,
50% of each reserve requirement should be with firm contract.”
(We also placed contracting caps for
the reserves. We’re just finalizing the definition on how much megawatts per
type of reserve and how many percent should be on a firm contract of NGCP.
Under the draft, 50% of each reserve requirement should be with firm contract.)
With the new rules, all reserve
energy categories — primary, secondary and tertiary reserves — are to be
procured through contracts provided that a competitive selection process is
undertaken for this purpose.
Reactive power support and black
start ancillary services are to be procured only through contracts. Black start
is the process of restoring a power system to recover from shutdown.
Mr. Delola said at present, many of
NGCP’s power reserve contracts are on a non-firm basis, which may not be
available when the system operator needs it.
“When you need it, because it’s
non-firm, puwede n’ya sabihin na wala ako (the supplier can say that
it’s not available),” he said.
Mr. Delola said the circular will
also launch the reserves market where power generation companies can trade
their output.
Once the reserve market starts
operating, the procurement of ancillary services is to be done through
contracts or through the market. All reserve categories are subject to the
central scheduling and dispatch of the market operator.
“The new market management system is
capable of handling the reserve market,” Mr. Delola said, referring to the
information technology infrastructure that allows for the trading of
electricity in the wholesale electricity spot market. — Victor V. Saulon
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