Published January 27, 2020, 10:00 PM
By Myrna M.
Velasco
More Filipino consumers can already
exercise their “power of choice” under the Retail Competition and Open Access
(RCOA) policy, as the Energy Regulatory Commission (ERC) has resumed acting on
applications for retail electricity supplier (RES) licenses.
ERC Director and Spokesperson
Floresinda B. Digal said the regulatory body has re-started processing both new
and renewal of RES licenses, as legal remedy had already been sorted out on this
matter – primarily in the renewal of RES licenses that already expired.
Digal explained that ERC invoked a
2011 Resolution on RES licensing that had not been affected by the 2017 Supreme
Court’s temporary restraining order (TRO), a ruling that basically stopped the
implementation of the revised ERC rules on RCOA that were promulgated in 2016.
Hence, with the 2011 rules on ERC
licensing not covered by the TRO of the high court, it was noted that the
regulatory body was able to legally lean on that for the resumption of issuing
new RES licenses, so “power of choice” can be offered to larger base of
qualified and interested consumers in the Luzon and Visayas grids.
The RCOA, or the policy that allows
consumers to choose their own electricity suppliers on their cost preference,
is one of the policy reforms enshrined under the Electric Power Industry Reform
Act (EPIRA) as one way to make electricity more affordable in the country.
Retail power customers vouch on the
“cheaper electricity rates” they have been sourcing from power suppliers –
dropping to the level of ₱3.00 to ₱3.50 per kilowatt-hour (kwh) compared to the
rate being passed on to captive customers or those without a choice yet at
₱5.00 to ₱6.00 per kWh on average.
With the legal impediments thrown
against the policy, the country’s power retail market currently operates on a
“voluntary basis” – for contestable customers within the prescribed consumption
thresholds of 1.0 megawatt to 750 kilowatts.
The long-term goal is to bring down
power retailing up to the level of households so they can also make a choice on
who shall be supplying their electricity – but this is seen happening so many
years from now yet.
Last year, the ERC confirmed the
expiration of RES licenses of some industry players in that segment – primarily
those held by the Ayala and Aboitiz groups. And with the resumption of RES
licenses’ processing, it is expected that these power retailers can flourish
again on their offer of power supply under the competitive purview of the
restructured power sector.
Beyond the players with expired
licenses, interested entrant-suppliers in the retail market could also join now
with the ERC’s re-instituted policy on processing of new RES license
applications that will be filed before it.
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