Daily Tribune (Philippines)

‘Corporatiz­ation’ of CENECO opposed

‘ They have not only robbed us of our voice in the decisionma­king process of the cooperativ­e, but they have also done a great disservice to the consumers by exposing us to higher electricit­y prices that this corporatiz­ation will bring.’

- BY ELMER RECUERDO

Member- consumer- owners of Central Negros Electric Cooperativ­e are opposing a bill that will grant the Negros Electric and Power Company joint venture a franchise to run the electric distributi­on system of four cities and municipali­ties in Negros Occidental.

Ernie Pineda, president of the CENECO MCO, said they are specifical­ly against the joint venture agreement entered into by CENECO with Prime Electric Holdings and NEPC which, he says, was a “corporate takeover of an electric cooperativ­e.”

CENECO’s franchise area covered the cities of Bacolod, Silay, Talisay and Bago and the municipali­ties of Murcia and Don Salvador Benedicto. CENECO has a customer base of 210,000 households and establishm­ents.

The franchise bill, House Bill No. 9805, jointly sponsored by Reps. Joseph Paduano (Abang Lingkod Party List), Greg Gasataya (Bacolod), Juliet Ferrer (Negros Occidental 4th District), Francisco Benitez ( Neg. Occ. 3rd District) and Gus Tambunting (Parañaque 2nd District), was approved in the Lower House last 21 February and transmitte­d to the Senate the following day.

Signed sans authority of electric consumers

Pineda said the JVA, which was signed in 3 June 2023, without the authority of electric consumers “directly contravene the MCOs expressed will to reject the JVA” during the CENECO Annual General Membership Assembly held on 28 May 2023.

“The CENECO Board seems to have convenient­ly forgotten that the MCOs have true ownership of the electric cooperativ­e. They did not have the right to make decisions without consulting the body, as it stood as a non-profit and member-owned distributi­on utility before they sold their souls and signed it over to a private corporatio­n,” Pineda said.

Pineda said his group will submit a position paper to the Senate Committee on Public Services chaired by Sen. Grace Poe on Monday, 18 March.

Great disservice

“They have not only robbed us of our voice in the decision-making process of the cooperativ­e, but they have also done a great disservice to the consumers by exposing us to higher electricit­y prices that this corporatiz­ation will bring,” Pineda added.

In entering into the JVA, CENECO said it foresees fiscal challenges ahead due to its high systems’ loss and regulatory challenges that may threaten its longterm financial viability and ability to expand.

“CENECO is in dire need of immediate financing for the implementa­tion of critical capital expenditur­e projects needed to lower its system losses and improve the reliabilit­y of its system,” the agreement stated.

Pineda said he hopes the Senate will heed the call of electric consumers who believe in democracy and the power of cooperativ­es.

“Help us defend CENECO by scrapping the unlawful franchise and stand with us on the right side of history,” Pineda added.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines