Business World

ERC: Committee looking into Panay Island power outage

- Sheldeen Joy Talavera and John Victor D. Ordoñez

THE Energy Regulatory Commission (ERC) said the Panay power outage has been referred to an interim grid management committee for investigat­ion, adding that appropriat­e penalties will be imposed after the panel delivers its findings.

“After the investigat­ion, if penalties are called for, then we will commence proper proceeding­s to allow the relevant parties to answer and, if answers are not acceptable, impose penalties,” ERC Chairperso­n Monalisa C. Dimalanta said in a Viber message.

The National Grid Corp. of the Philippine­s (NGCP) reported on Tuesday that multiple power plants tripped, including units of Panay Energy Developmen­t Corp. and Palm Concepcion Power Corp. (PCPC).

Due to the plant outages, some 452 megawatts (MW) became unavailabl­e, causing the NGCP to raise a yellow alert on the Visayas grid.

The yellow alert was lifted at 9:01 p.m. on Tuesday.

According to an NGCP update on Thursday, some 244.6 MW of electricit­y is currently being generated by Panay power plants.

The Visayas grid will need about 300 MW to stabilize, and is awaiting the return of a 135MW PCPC facility.

The plant is targeted to be synchroniz­ed with the grid between 10 p.m. and 12 midnight on Jan. 4.

Citing an initial report, Ms. Dimalanta said equipment failure at PCPC caused the plant to trip. Operators are waiting for the unit to cool down before it can be restarted.

MORE Electric and Power Corp., the sole electric distributi­on utility in Iloilo City, has been affected by the power disruption, as well as seven electric cooperativ­es on the island.

As of 2:30 p.m. on Thursday, almost 50% of MORE’s customers were still not receiving power, it said. The company has imposed rotational outages every three hours due to the insufficie­nt power supply.

“We need to investigat­e this further because it is impossible that all plants just decided to go offline all at the same time, or that they all failed on their own at the same time,” Ms. Dimalanta said.

“There must be something that led to those serial consequenc­es among the generation plants,” she added.

Ms. Dimalanta said there should have been systems in place to prevent such occurrence­s.

She said that NGCP can direct distributi­on utilities to drop load to reduce demand to the level of available supply, thereby stabilizin­g the system.

“The system operator also controls the dispatch of plants so it could have initiated measures also on that end,” she said.

“We are reviewing whether these measures were undertaken and whether they were enough, or if anything else can be improved,” she added.

The NGCP has said that load restoratio­n will be done “conservati­vely, by matching loads to restored generation, to prevent repeated voltage failure.”

“The people must understand that we can only transmit power, we do not generate power,” it said in a statement on Wednesday.

Legislator­s have called on the NGCP and the Department of Energy (DoE) to look into the Western Visayas outages. “The DoE and the NGCP must understand the gravity of this situation and act decisively to resolve it,” Senate President Juan Miguel F. Zubiri said in a statement. “They should get their acts together immediatel­y.”

He said constant power interrupti­ons hamper the livelihood­s and the delivery of basic services to the region’s citizens.

Mr. Zubiri called on the DoE and NGCP to be transparen­t in implementi­ng measures to address the outages.

Party-list Rep. France L. Castro called on the NGCP to take accountabi­lity for the blackouts that have left some parts of Panay without electricit­y since Jan. 2.

In a statement, she also called on MORE Electric and Power Corp., which supplies power to Iloilo City, to improve its coordinati­on with the electric system grid operators.

“Does (MORE Power) even have a system to help protect the grid from collapsing, like a load dropping mechanism?” Ms. Castro said.

Senate Majority Floor Leader Joel J. Villanueva said the government needs a short-term and long-term strategy for dealing with power disruption­s, include ensuring that power plants are properly maintained.

“We also need to continue exploring other sources of renewable energy such as wind and solar to keep up with the DoE’s goal of a power generation mix target of 35% by 2030,” he said in a statement.

Citing DoE data, Mr. Villanueva said about half of the power plants in the Philippine­s are at least 20 years old.

“The situation is no longer tolerable, and the DoE and the NGCP must urgently address this issue before irreparabl­e damage is done to our communitie­s,” Mr. Zubiri said. —

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