By Lenie Lectura - February 3, 2020
THE Philippine Electricity
Market Corp. (PEMC) and the Independent Electricity Market Operator of the
Philippines (Iemop) were directed by the Department of Energy (DOE) to submit
this week a performance report on the current electricity spot market
structure.
“For the purpose of transparency and
good governance, and pursuant to the mandate of the DOE to supervise the
restructuring of the electricity industry, please submit within five working
days from receipt hereof, your respective memoranda on the current PEMC-Iemop
structure vis-à-vis the Epira provision on the establishment of an Independent
Market Operator [IMO],” said Energy Secretary Alfonso Cusi in a letter to PEMC
President Oscar Ala and Iemop President Richard Nethercott.
The letter was dated January 31.
PEMC used to be the operator of the
Wholesale Electricity Spot Market before Iemop took over. PEMC remains the
governing arm of WESM.
Cusi said the submission of the
memoranda is part of an ongoing review and assessment of the market structure
to ensure transparency, integrity of the WESM, as well as the protection of the
consumers.
A task force was created in March
2019 to oversee the assessment of the WESM performance under the governance of
PEMC and operations of the IMO.
“The assessment of the special task
force covers the following: assessment of PEMC as the governance arm of
the WESM, assessment of the performance of Iemop as the IMO and the overall
performance of the WESM,” the DOE said.
Cusi’s letter comes after a lawmaker
aired the allegation that Iemop’s creation was a result of a “sweetheart” deal.
Puwersa ng Bayaning
Atleta Party-list Rep. Jericho Nograles said the selection for an IMO to
manage the WESM was conducted “without any competitive selection process
[CSP].”
It also alleged that Iemop grew
“from a P7,000 capitalization to become a multimillion outfit with a total
declared income of more than P100 million for the end of 2018.”
Moreover, the lawmaker said Iemop
“automatically collects” 50 centavos for every kilowatt-hour from the consumers
monthly electric bill.
The DOE, PEMC and Iemop disputed
these.
The DOE said a competitive bidding
was required only for foreign participants as an option under the Electric
Power Industry Reform Act if the IMO was created in 2007.
“The DOE opted to create a separate
entity composed of Filipinos who have acquired the necessary expertise to
operate the WESM and ensure that the market will be managed by Filipinos,” the
agency said.
While Iemop collects from consumers,
the DOE said the amount is only “less than 1 centavo” and not 50 centavos.
The DOE also stressed that
Iemop was created by virtue of DOE’s enactment of Department Circular
2018-01-0002 dated January 17, 2020, and consequently the IMO Transition
Plan, which are based on Section 30 of the Epira, which were jointly approved
by the DOE and the Electric Power Participants.
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