Manila Bulletin

Meralco rates down by 10.2728/kwh in May

Despite hike in WESM prices

- By MYRNA M. VELASCO

Despite the 13.5355 per kilowatt hour (kwh) hike in charges from the Wholesale Electricit­y Spot Market (WESM) during the month, the lower contract costs of Manila Electric Company (Meralco) had been able to reduce its overall rates in this May billing cycle by 10.2728 per kwh.

For households in the base consumptio­n level of 200-kilowatt hours, the aggregate reduction in their bills will be to the tune of 155.

Factoring in all cost components, the utility firm’s billed cost for the month had been at 110.2866 per kwh from the month-ago level of 110.5594 per kwh.

Meralco noted that its procuremen­t of supply from contracted independen­t power producers (IPPs) and correspond­ing power supply agreements (PSAs) had decreased by significan­t 10.7544 per kwh and 10.5143 per kwh, respective­ly.

Had not been for the spikes in WESM prices, the utility firm indicated that the cost reduction to consumers would have been heftier. The positive twist to its lower contract costs from IPPs and PSAs then lies on the fact that it was able to dilute what should have been higher costs from the spot market.

Beyond the contract costs’ softening, Meralco has further cited “the strengthen­ing of the peso against the US dollar and lower fuel prices (for coal and Malampaya) as the intervenin­g factors that had pulled down the final generation charge in this high demand month of summer.

Thus, for the generation charge component in the rate, this was on a downtrend of 10.0814 per kwh to 15.5508 per kwh vis-à-vis the previous billing cycle’s 15.6322 per kwh.

“The generation charge decrease is primarily due to lower charges from the IPPs and PSAs,” Meralco stressed, adding that the volume of procuremen­t from the IPP contracts hovered at 43 percent; and PSAs at 45 percent; and the balance of 12 percent from the WESM.

Meralco further qualified that roughly 98 percent of IPP charges and 72 percent of PSA charges are dollar-denominate­d, qualifying that for the price of natural gas from Malampaya, which accounts for about

64 percent of Meralco’s supply, it had been down this month as a result of the quarterly repricing “to reflect lower crude oil prices in the world market.”

For the other cost components, the transmissi­on charge was on downswing by 10.0808 per kwh “due to higher system load factor”; while taxes and other charges declined by 10.1106 per kwh.

Relative to the WESM charges, Meralco affirmed that it had climbed by a significan­t 13.54 per kwh “because of tight supply conditions in Luzon resulting in seven instances of yellow alerts and seven instances of red alerts” as declared by system operator National Grid Corporatio­n of the Philippine­s.

Neverthele­ss, the anticipate­d impact of the spiky spot prices had been offset by the lower costs of the utility firm’s procuremen­ts from other power suppliers.

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