Manila Bulletin

Some coal plants defer shipments due to low power demand

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A number of coal plants in the country have been deferring schedules of their coal deliveries because of declining electricit­y demand, not exactly a case of logistical obstructio­ns, the Department of Energy (DOE) has noted.

That somehow countered an earlier status report of the Independen­t Electricit­y Market Operator of the Philippine­s (IEMOP), the operator of the Wholesale Electricit­y Spot Market (WESM), in which it stated that “the restrictio­n of supply from coal plants may be a result of logistical delays in the transporta­tion and delivery delays of coal brought about by the extended enhanced community quarantine.”

The WESM operator further indicated that such scenario among coal plants would require shift in the availabili­ty of power plants in the system, which in the process could drive up electricit­y rates.

The power plant owners and operators are required to declare the state of availabili­ty of their capacities in the WESM because of the prevailing must-offer rule; and for them not be to thrown with allegation­s of capacity withholdin­g which is a form of anticompet­itive behavior in the spot market.

Apparently though, there is a mismatch in the pronouncem­ents of the DOE and IEMOP that may warrant scrutiny as to which entity is really giving accurate and reliable facts, because such inconsiste­ncy could have implicatio­ns on the overall operations of the country’s electricit­y system.

The energy department reiterated “some power facilities are deferring their scheduled coal shipments because of lower power demand, and not because of logistical delays.”

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