With no solution in
sight, power crisis will spillover 2016 - TUCP
By TUCP
September 9, 2014
QUEZON CITY – Without
an acceptable and genuine national strategy addressing the forthcoming
energy crisis in 2015, the Trade Union Congress of the Philippines (TUCP)
is seeing more brownouts to happen in 2016.
TUCP warned that the real
extent of the problem will kick in 2016 and beyond if the current
Department of Energy (DOE) secretary resort to quick fix and expensive
band aid solutions such as renting power barges and generator sets,
gas turbines and effect the Interruptible Load Program (ILP) – a
program by the DOE allowing malls to run their generator sets with
consumers paying for their maintenance and operation costs.
Under these schemes, TUCP
insists the generating companies and their distribution utility will
merrily do their supply and demand games while continuously burdening
consumers with high power rates and more brownouts. The implications
for workers who will be laid off, for jobs that will never be created,
for imperiled businessmen, and for the poor consumers are disaster.
“We are alarmed at the
silence of the government to directly and genuinely address the power
crisis. The silence of Secretary Petilla is deafening. After his
‘emergency powers’ call was made, he is now backpedalling and trying
to portray the problem as less than it is. Either he is the ‘boy who
cried wolf’ or simply trying to place a band-aid fix because he was
unable to make a case for surgery to the president, he clearly has not
grasped the true extent of the problem,” said TUCP executive director
Louie Corral.
Corral warned that the ILP
program is just a stopgap measure. He said Meralco customers will now
be financially obligated to cover the costs for Messrs. Sy and
Gokongwei running their mall generators for their own use on the
theory that by freeing Meralco to keep the lights on in other areas
that these oligarchs are doing consumers a favor.
“We are going to end up
subsidizing their malls. But the 2015 power deficit is just the tip of
the iceberg. The failure of both the DOE to address the policy gap now
makes it inevitable that the crisis will repeat itself in 2016 and
onwards,” Corral emphasized.
The major policy gap is that
government does not incentivize the entry of additional and cheaper
power capacity if it continues to allow Meralco to enter ‘sweetheart’
bilateral contracts from their preferred suppliers which will always
mean low reserves to ensure high power rates.
To bring in genuine
competition and additional supply, TUCP is proposing that there is
enough leeway in EPIRA for DOE to mandate that henceforth all the
distribution utilities such as the market-dominant Meralco,
controlling 74%of the Luzon market, to source their power supply every
3 years from international public bidding held under the supervision
of the DOE and ERC.
TUCP suspects Meralco is
again behind the power crisis. Meralco allegedly hostaged its
consumers to their Redondo coal plant supplier in Subic. When the 600
MW coal plant was stymied by the Supreme Court issuance of Writ of
Kalikasan and the objections of environmental groups, Meralco could
have chosen 2 to 3 years ago to take their supply from AES Masinloc
which also wanted to set up 600 MW plant or even from GN Power in
Quezon. Instead they insisted on Redondo.
With 74% of the market share
in Luzon, Meralco is proverbial ‘only game in town’ and if they chose
any other source, this would have prevented the power shortfall for
2015. “Our call is therefore to clip this self-serving option of their
subject the choice of who will supply them to international public
bidding under DOE supervision,” he added.