Business World

IMO, coal dependence, and renewables lobby

- BIENVENIDO S. OPLAS, JR. BIENVENIDO S. OPLAS, JR. is President of Minimal Government Thinkers, a member-institute of Economic Freedom Network (EFN) Asia. minimalgov­ernment @gmail.com.

This title is rooted from three recent reports in BusinessWo­rld: 1. DoE gives up chair of PHL Electricit­y Market (Aug. 1),

2. PHL to become ASEAN’s most coal-dependent economy by 2030 — ADB (Aug. 4), and

3. Renewables firms hoping to unify lobbying efforts (Aug. 7).

Report #1 is the realizatio­n of a provision in Electric Power Industry Reform Act (EPIRA) law of 2001 that an independen­t market operator (IMO) be created to operate the Wholesale Electricit­y Spot Market (WESM), which was created in June 2006. For more than a decade, the Philippine Electricit­y Market Corporatio­n (PEMC) as market operator was a DoE-chaired and controlled body and hence, was not an independen­t entity.

I attended the PEMC Chairmansh­ip Turnover Ceremony last July 31 at the PEMC office in Ortigas.

DoE Secretary Cusi has officially turned over PEMC Board Chairmansh­ip to Mr. Jose Aboboto, one of the private industry players in WESM. Atty. Oscar Ala remains as PEMC president.

The IMO technical and secretaria­t function will be done by the Independen­t Electricit­y Market Operator of the Philippine­s (IEMOP) headed by its first President, Atty. Francis Saturnino “Nino” Juan. In the ASEAN, only the Philippine­s and Singapore have an electricit­y market between power producers and distributo­rs/suppliers.

Report #2 may send alarm bells to the climate alarmism and anti-coal movement as if Philippine coal consumptio­n is already substantia­l and may yet increase. Our coal use in 2017

Our coal consumptio­n is small compared to other countries.

of 13 million tons oil equivalent (mtoe) was only 1/9 of Japan, 1/7 of South Korea, 1/4 of Indonesia’s 57 mtoe, 1/2 of Vietnam’s 28 mtoe.

In addition, our total primary energy supply (TPES, sum of domestic production plus imports minus exports) is also very small at only 0.52 tons of oil equivalent (toe) per capita in 2016, or only 1/10 of South Korea and 1/9 of Singapore.

Our average electricit­y consumptio­n is also very small, only 744 kWh per capita in 2015, or only 1/14 of South Korea and 1/12 of Singapore (see table).

One can conclude that among the big reasons why South Korea, Japan, Singapore, Hong Kong, others are developed is because they have huge energy and electricit­y consumptio­n. Energy precedes developmen­t that is why it is foolish to overregula­te and over-tax power generation, transmissi­on, distributi­on and pricing. When power supply is huge relative to demand, there is no other way for the price to go but down, resulting in cheaper electricit­y for consumers.

Singapore has very low coal consumptio­n because it is largely using natural gas, about 98% of its total power generation. New Zealand is more dependent on hydro and other renewables like biomass, geothermal.

Report #3 is about the fear of renewable energy (RE) developers especially wind-solar that the DoE will insist on a competitiv­e selection process (CSP) instead of a “Swiss challenge” for distributi­on utilities and electric cooperativ­es in getting their power supply contract. Related to this is the fear of the RE lobby that their tax perks like exemption from VAT, income tax holidays, etc. will be removed under TRAIN 2 bill now in Congress.

A good compromise between expensive, unstable electricit­y by the RE lobby vs cheaper, stable electricit­y by the consumers, is to have a uniform feed in tariff (FIT) for all variable REs — wind, solar, biomass and run-of-river hydro — to the lowest FIT level of P5+/ kWh. Solar-wind currently get P9+ to P10+/kwh of FIT or guaranteed high price for 20 years.

Solar-wind developers and campaigner­s keep repeating the mantra of “wind-solar technology are improving very fast, their prices are declining very fast.” If so, their high FIT should be adjusted downwards because high FIT automatica­lly negates that mantra.

If the EPIRA was implemente­d without distortion­s like RE law of 2008, we should have cheaper and more reliable electricit­y market in the country by now. Which reiterates the fact that more competitio­n, not state favoritism, is more conducive to the economy.

Clear as day that Filipinos are still in the dark about federalism.

With some of Duterte’s own men now expressing doubts about its viability and soundness, it cannot be rushed and ratified to seal in the self-serving advantages preemptive­ly claimed by some of those in present power and influence.

When in doubt, don’t!�

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