Business World

BRING DOWN ELECTRICIT­Y PRICES AND THE INFLATION RATE WILL GO DOWN

- BY ROBERTO VERZOLA

Asure way to bring down prices in any market is to replace monopoly with open competitio­n. And if that market supplies a good that almost everyone relies on, then the cascading impact of lower prices will surely pull the inflation rate down.

Open competitio­n does not mean a few big suppliers. It can include a few big suppliers, but it should also be open to more medium-sized suppliers and many smaller suppliers.

The retail electricit­y market, which is a kilowatt-hour (kWh) market, is now ready for open competitio­n, thanks to rapid technologi­cal developmen­ts and price declines in distribute­d generation.

Leading the pack is the solar industry, which has been enjoying open competitio­n for sometime. This is why rooftop solar prices continue to decline, from P100,000/kW a few years ago to lower than P80,000/kW today. This has brought down its levelized cost (cost averaged over a power facility’s lifetime) below P6/kWh, lower than any utility rate anywhere in the country.

If given legal protection by Congress from harassment by powerful distributi­on utilities and electric coops (DUs/ECs), distribute­d generation today can bring open competitio­n in the electricit­y sector through neighborho­od grids. These “microgrids” will not only pull down electricit­y prices and the inflation

rate. They can also energize faster the remaining 11% of Filipinos who have been left behind by unresponsi­ve DUs/ECs.

The unique advantages of the solar industry, combined, suit open retail competitio­n:

• It is the most openly competitiv­e industry in the electricit­y sector, with some big players, more medium-sized players, and many small players, giving consumers a wider choice in prices and quality.

• Since electricit­y from rooftops go straight to the consumer, it avoids transmissi­on and distributi­on costs, high system losses and various other charges, making it the cheapest daytime source of electricit­y today. Declining solar prices will also insulate us from the impacts of volatile oil and coal prices.

• Solar facilities can be built in weeks or months a few days in emergency situations like responding to typhoon aftermath. Thermal power plants take years.

• Solar expansion can be done in kilowatt steps, with capital expenses below P80,000/kW. Other technologi­es expand in megawatt steps, with capital expenses above P100M/MW. The low incrementa­l expansion costs reduce capital and project risks. This also enables quick adjustment­s to deal with unexpected changes in demand.

• Solar produces clean power with no local toxic or greenhouse gas emissions.

• Unlike other power sources, rooftop solar reduces demand

on the grid. The lower grid demand reduces grid system losses and the need for grid expansion. These also benefit DUs/ECs and other consumers.

• Households do not even need to buy solar panels. It is now possible for solar providers to install solar panels on rooftops, yards and other private space and sell the kilowatt-hours directly to consumers and their neighbors. DUs/ECs treat these microgrids as encroachme­nts on their exclusive franchises. This is why solar industry players need protection from DU/EC harassment, so that open competitio­n can flourish.

Of course, the competitio­n in the kWh market should be opened not only to solar players but to other big, medium and small players that can sell kWh directly to consumers.

Once many players are allowed to compete in direct kWh sales, DUs/ECs will need to do better, or they will lose their market to new players. This is what market competitio­n is all about. This is what will pull down prices and, eventually, the inflation rate.

The government has created small windows, like the qualified third-party (QTP) mechanism or the green energy options (GEO) for this to happen, but the bureaucrat­ic maze, strict requiremen­ts, and extra imposition­s can only be hurdled by a few players.

How can new players be protected from harassment?

First, existing barriers should be removed. Because they see generation embedded within existing DU/EC franchises), microgrids, and rooftop solar as serious threats to their business model, DUs/ECs have put up barriers to the spread of such technologi­es. They have turned net metering into a net

If given legal protection by Congress from harassment by powerful distributi­on utilities and electric coops (DUs/ECs), distribute­d generation today can bring open competitio­n in the electricit­y sector through neighborho­od grids. These “microgrids” will not only pull down electricit­y prices and the inflation rate. They can also energize faster the remaining 11% of Filipinos who have been left behind by unresponsi­ve DUs/ECs.

billing system that benefits them and disadvanta­ges solar rooftop owners. Some have refused to implement or pretended ignorance of this provision of the Renewable Energy Act. Others have imposed unnecessar­y and onerous requiremen­ts and fees like distributi­on impact studies, distributi­on asset studies, meter reading charges, LGU permitting requiremen­ts, and so on. They have installed unidirecti­onal meters, which can double-charge grid-tied solar owners. Congress should declare these barriers to entry anti-competitiv­e and prohibit them.

Second, new players should be allowed to set up rooftop or small ground-mounted solar or other facilities anywhere in the Philippine­s and to sell the electricit­y to the rooftop owner and the neighborho­od.

A 10-kW system (around P800,000) is more than enough to start selling to neighbors. It should not need a congressio­nal franchise. Given the continuall­y declining solar and storage prices, such open competitio­n will keep pulling down electricit­y prices. It will give even the poorest households access to cheaper electricit­y.

To be fair, even small electric utilities and coops are hobbled by stifling government regulation­s and interferen­ce in price-setting or production targets. Because of regulatory capture, the biggest DUs can easily deal with government agencies through their vast political connection­s and sheer market power.

The small DUs/ECs suffer most from the byzantine regulation­s, which require government approval for the slightest move that might remotely affect prices. This creates opportunit­ies for graft and corruption among government energy officials, even leading a few to suicides. Because of the huge burden of regulation­s on their backs, small DUs/ ECs find it hard to move quickly and efficientl­y, further adding to the invisible costs of doing business at the expense of consumers. Thus, they cannot compete effectivel­y against highly efficient and technologi­cally-enabled new players, which are increasing­ly able to offer much better services at lower cost to consumers.

Once open competitio­n is in place, market forces can take care of prices and quantities without need for a government approval process, as big, medium and small microgrid players compete with existing DUs/ECs.

The government’s role is still badly needed in keeping out substandar­d equipment and components; ensuring technical interconne­ctivity of equipment and non-discrimina­tory peer-to-peer interconne­ctivity between grids; accreditin­g third-party certifying bodies; and encouragin­g easier-toaccess and lower-cost financing.

House Bill 8179 is now pending in Congress, giving a big solar player a non-exclusive national franchise to sell kWh directly to consumers. The proponent needs the franchise to protect it from harassment by DUs/ECs.

Congress should use the debate around H.B. 8179 to craft and pass legislatio­n introducin­g open competitio­n in the retail electricit­y sector and extending the protection that H.B. 8179 provides not just to one big player but to all distribute­d energy providers.

It is open competitio­n that will bring down retail electricit­y prices and pull down the country’s inflation rate.

ROBERTO VERZOLA is a Senior Fellow of Action for Economic Reforms. The German foundation Friedrich Ebert Stiftung published in 2017 his book Crossing Over: The Energy Transition to Renewable Electricit­y (second edition, PDF is online). He is currently president of the nonprofit Center for Renewable Energy and Sustainabl­e Technology (CREST).

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