Business World

Panel releases findings on solar FiT qualificat­ion

- — Victor V. Saulon

THE Department of Energy (DoE) committee evaluating the process of endorsing solar projects for the 20-year guaranteed rate under the feed-in-tariff (FiT) system has released its findings without resolving the claims of those left with unviable solar farms.

In a 12- page report, excluding attachment­s, members of the panel said their study “revealed several challenges” in the implementa­tion of the FiT guidelines. They came up with 10 recommenda­tions, including directing the department’s legal services to respond to all pending inquiries as to the basis for exclusion of projects from the solar FiT.

The order to the legal team was meant to “resolve with dispatch” the pending legal actions before the department, and to determine whether the petitionin­g project qualified before the March 15, 2016 deadline, and within the 500-megawatt (MW) installati­on target.

The FiT system offers guaranteed payments on a fixed rate per kilowatt-hour ( kWh) for 20 years for emerging renewable energy sources in a “first to build, first to FiT” race. Electricit­y consumers who are supplied with electricit­y through the distributi­on or transmissi­on network share in the cost of the FiT through a uniform charge per kWh. That charge is used to pay the solar power developers.

In its report, the panel recommende­d that the DoE’s Renewable Energy Management Bureau (REMB) strictly comply with the timeline within the FiT eligibilit­y guidelines “for the timely issuance of the required certificat­es and issuances.”

“In lining up the permitting, it must, therefore, be necessary that all documentar­y requiremen­ts are deemed to have been secured prior to the authority to connect. This protects the process as well as the integrity of the grid, which we are now seeing as a very important considerat­ion in allowing intermitte­nt renewable energy resource to connect,” the committee said.

It recommende­d that the REMB be directed to coordinate with the National Grid Corp. of the Philippine­s and the Philippine Electricit­y Market Corp. in providing the complete checklist of documents that will be used as the basis for issuing an authority to connect.

The DoE committee also recommende­d tweaks in the definition of terms, including aligning them with those used by the Energy Regulatory Commission (ERC) to prevent confusion.

“For policy considerat­ion, it is recommende­d to change the word ‘Successful Commission­ing’ of Sec. 6 (e) of Department Circular 2013-05-0009 to ‘Commercial Operation’ since what is endorsed to the ERC for FiT Eligibilit­y are those projects which attained commercial operation,” it said.

The committee’s report was requested by the Senate energy committee in a hearing late last year. Some solar power developers received a copy of the report.

In June 2016, the DoE endorsed seven solar projects to receive a rate of P9.68 for each kWh they feed into the electricit­y distributi­on or transmissi­on network, while 17 others are to get P8.69 per kWh, ending speculatio­n about the outcome of its installati­on target for the renewable energy.

The 24 solar projects that were endorsed to receive the guaranteed FiT were developed by 20 companies, which in all have installed 525.95 MW or 25.95 MW more than the department’s target of 500 MW.

Former Energy secretary Zenaida Y. Monsada said that the 500-MW installati­on target was exceeded by around 300 MW. She left to the current administra­tion the resolution of the rate for those that failed to make it to the DoE list.

 ??  ?? THE FIT SYSTEM offers guaranteed payments on a fixed rate per kilowatt-hour (kWh) for 20 years for emerging renewable energy sources in a “first to build, first to FiT” race.
THE FIT SYSTEM offers guaranteed payments on a fixed rate per kilowatt-hour (kWh) for 20 years for emerging renewable energy sources in a “first to build, first to FiT” race.

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