Published
By Myrna M. Velasco
The operating entity of
the Wholesale Electricity Spot Market (WESM) has a new president in lawyer
Richard Nethercott — already the third one to serve at the helm of the
Independent Electricity Market Operator of the Philippines (IEMOP) in less than
two years.
Nethercott, who is more
known as a litigation lawyer before he was named into IEMOP Board in 2018
through Energy Secretary Alfonso G. Cusi’s imprimatur, succeeded former IEMOP
Presidents Francis Saturnino Juan and Jose Mari T. Bigornia. He was elected
president on January 10 this year.
Prior to his stint at
WESM, Nethercott has no known background in the energy sector – more so, in
running a technical and complex electricity spot market. He was running his own
law firm and had high profile clients prior to joining the IEMOP board two
years ago.
Ahead of Nethercott’s leadership turn at the WESM would be array of deliverables:
such as the recurrently delayed operations of WESM-Mindanao; the changes in the
trading configuration of the amalgamated Luzon and Visayas spot markets; the
addition of reserve market trading; RE Market as well as addressing the
collusion raps long hurled against the spot market.
IEMOP was officially
spun off from its governing entity Philippine Electricity Market Corporation
(PEMC) in September 2018. It was at that time that its function had been
clearly demarcated to focus solely on supervising and managing the operations
of the spot market.
The WESM operating
entity had been on constant assault for prospective abolition or re-merging
into PEMC, but now that the IEMOP chief executive is highly perceived to be
Cusi’s own guy, energy sector players are expecting that the spot market
clobbering may also cool off.
When an independent
market operator was instituted for WESM roughly two years ago, there had been
high expectations that the market’s affairs would really be managed and run
independently – but the reverse was seen happening, with the government having
tighter grip on the spot market now, which essentially is perceived as somewhat
a failure relating to that particular exercise.
For WESM-Mindanao, it
is expected that its commercial operations will finally happen within the first
half of this year, as trial operations with targeted participants had already
been fulfilled.
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