Published January 17, 2020, 10:00 PM
By MYRNA M.
VELASCO
As the scuffle between two companies
claiming service jurisdiction over Iloilo City intensifies, the Department of
Energy (DOE) said it is closely monitoring power supply situation in the area
so the consumers will not end up taking collateral damage in the legal
tug-of-war between Panay Electric Company (PECO) and More Electric Power
Corporation of the Razon group.
DOE Director Mario C. Marasigan
noted that one major concern they have been focusing on is ensuring that Iloilo
City’s supply will not be disrupted especially during the summer months when
power demand would be hitting peak.
The energy official qualified that the dilemma of electricity service in Iloilo is not on supply, but “it’s on the operations of PECO plus their legal concerns with More.”
The energy official qualified that the dilemma of electricity service in Iloilo is not on supply, but “it’s on the operations of PECO plus their legal concerns with More.”
PECO’s public utility
franchise expired in January 2019, but it was able to continue operating its
distribution facilities on the strength of a certificate of public convenience
and necessity (CPCN) that was granted by the Energy Regulatory Commission.
The entity granted with
franchise by Congress to distribute and serve the electricity needs of Iloilo
City is More Electric, but its entry into serving the area is still legally
impeded because of several pending judicial cases.
Marasigan said “DOE is
closely monitoring the situation in Iloilo and we have to ensure no disruption
of services,” although this early, he qualified that power supply shortage
won’t certainly be a factor.
Just recently, the
Supreme Court has denied the petition of PECO to have the expropriation case
filed by More Electric to be moved outside of Iloilo City.
The high court
primarily junked PECO’s plea to have the hearings on the expropriation case be
transferred to any court in Metro Manila, or as an alternative, to have it
consolidated with another pending case at the Mandaluyong regional trial court
– the latter of which is questioning the Constitutionality of the expropriation
powers bequeathed to the Razon group by Congress.
The SC had thumbed down
PECO’s premise that public scrutiny could affect the judge handling the
expropriation case, with it stressing that “the mere possibility of prejudice
is not sufficient to justify a transfer of venue, as aptly argued by respondent
MORE.”
The high court
similarly stipulated that PECO failed to present “adequate proof that the
accompanying publicity may cause prejudice to it.”
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