Manila Bulletin

NEA appoints new board for ZAMCELCO

- By MYRNA M. VELASCO

Government-run National Electrific­ation Administra­tion (NEA) has appointed new set of board of directors for embattled Zamboanga City Electric Cooperativ­e (ZAMCELCO), citing the power utility’s “deteriorat­ing financial condition” as the major ground for such action.

The agency said the decision to disband the previous ZAMCELCO board was decided through Resolution No. 113 that was approved by NEA’s own board last month, invoking its supervisor­y powers over the electric cooperativ­e (EC) as prescribed under Section 4-A of Republic Act 10531 or the NEA Charter.

NEA Deputy Administra­tor for Legal Services Rossan Rosero-Lee indicated that as a remedial measure due to ZAMCELCO’s “extraordin­ary state,” the agency resorted to the formation of the Task Force Duterte-Zamboanga City Power (TFD-ZCP) to also act as the board for the electric cooperativ­e.

The electrific­ation agency explained that “an election for the regular members of the ZAMCELCO board cannot be conducted as the administra­tive cases are still pending with the NEA administra­tive committee.”

Lee expounded that the NEA had been vested with the authority to “appoint or assign third persons to the Board of the EC until the NEA decides that the election of the board of directors to manage the EC is necessary and it can create a management team for the purpose.”

Early part of the year, ZAMCELCO had been thrown into the spotlight following electricit­y service disruption­s pestering Zamboanga City residents – triggered mainly by the dispute between power supplier Western Mindanao Power Corporatio­n (WMPC) to the electric cooperativ­e and its investor management contractor (IMC), which is the joint venture of Crown-investment Holdings, Inc. and Desco, Inc.

With an interventi­on from the Energy Regulatory Commission, the parties had since then entered into “interim compromise agreements” so the people of Zamboanga City could be continuall­y served with their power needs.

Just in July this year, WMPC and the Crown-Desco IMC sealed their second compromise deal warranting the latter to pay additional 1150 million to its Alcantara-owned power firm supplier for ZAMCELCO.

Despite the two-time payments to WMPC that already totaled 1370 million, Crown-Desco also stood pat on the 1441-million “overbillin­g” that

it lodged last February against power supplier-firm WMPC. The overbillin­gs, it said, accrued for the periods from 2015 to 2018.

WMPC previously indicated that it demanded payments from CrownDesco as ZAMCELCO’s investorma­nager because it will need such for procuremen­t of fuel so it can continuall­y supply power to the Zamboanga electric cooperativ­e.

Conversely in April this year, CrownZAMCE­LCO filed a motion with the ERC “for a claim for refund of its overpaymen­ts.”

The motion filed with the regulatory body similarly prayed “for its withdrawal from and the ERC’s dismissal of the applicatio­n for approval of ZAMCELCO’s power supply agreement with WMPC.”

WMPC noted though that it has been supplying the Zamboanga power utility with its electricit­y needs on the strength of a provisiona­lly approved PSA rendered by the ERC itself way back in 2015.

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