Manila Bulletin

ERC files new motion seeking to lift High Court TRO on RCOA

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The Energy Regulatory Commission (ERC) has recently filed a motion with the Supreme Court seeking the lifting of its temporary restrainin­g order (TRO) against the enforced rules of the Retail Competitio­n and Open Access (RCOA) policy.

In an omnibus motion, the ERC has reiterated its prayer to lift the RCOA TRO issued on February 17 this year; and has also sought clarificat­ion on the scope of the high court’s order.

In that plea, the regulatory body primarily asked guidance on possibly allowing a lower threshold of 750 kilowatts (kW) for contestabl­e customers that could be covered by retail competitio­n; and for the ERC to be given so-signal to renew as well as issue new retail electricit­y supplier (RES) licenses to qualified industry players.

“They (SC) were the ones who issued the TRO – it’s impacting on the industry. Our hands our tied, so we have to seek guidance from them on how we can move forward,” ERC Officer-inCharge Alfredo J. Non said.

The regulatory body indicated that it cannot say for now if the lowering of threshold to 750kW shall be done on ‘voluntary basis’ or mandatory, because that shall depend largely on the final prescripti­on of the high court.

At present, contestabi­lity or the phase of retail competitio­n is at 1.0megawatt level and still done on ‘voluntary basis’ following the SC’s restrainin­g order.

Another hurdle for the industry, arising from the legal skirmish, had been the non-renewal of RES licenses because the ERC is not exactly certain how it shall sort out this dilemma after the ruling of the high court.

There have been several RES licenses that already expired and some are due to lapse, but they cannot secure regulatory approvals on renewal. Because of this, they raised fear of default on contracts with their customers.

Previous RES rules also allowed lower threshold of 750kW, but because of prescribed mandatory enforcemen­t of contestabi­lity then, it was questioned by affected groups before the SC and that triggered the TRO issuance.

With dilemmas being encountere­d by the industry now, remedial measures are also being advanced by the Department of Energy (DoE) – a separate step from ERC’s filing.

On DoE’s take, it wants voluntary enforcemen­t of retail competitio­n at a threshold that could be down to as low as 500 kilowatts (kW) and will also be opening the participat­ion of the local retail electricit­y supplier (L-RES) units of the distributi­on utilities (DUs) into the competitiv­e arena of the restructur­ed electricit­y sector. (MMV)

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