Manila Bulletin

At Usapang Kongreso on power rates

- Atty. Vic Dimagiba is President of Laban Konsyumer, Inc. Email: labankonsy­umer@gmail.com ATTY. VIC DIMAGIBA

Iwas recently invited to speak at “Usapang Kongreso”, a social media project of former Speaker Alan Peter Cayetano. The objective of that program was to engage the public in the government budget process to ensure that the budget is spent on programs that would enhance the consumers’ access to basic necessitie­s and services at fair and reasonable prices. Dr. Alan Brucal of the Philippine Institute of Developmen­t Studies (PIDS) was also present.

Our discussion focused on the phenomenon of our country having one of the highest power rates in Asia, what the government can do to bring down the prices of electricit­y, and by doing so, protecting the rights and interests of the Filipino consumers. The high price of power is a major issue now that the unforeseen consequenc­es of the pandemic has visited rising levels of underemplo­yment and unemployme­nt in the country.

I pointed out three areas where government could contribute towards reducing power rates. These are by: (1) removing passed-on charges which include subsidies, taxes, and universal charges, (2) rewriting the incentives of the renewable energy sector, and (3) appointing consumer representa­tives in the Energy Regulatory Commission and in the Boards of government energy corporatio­ns.

The government should pursue the rewriting of the Electric Power Industry Reform Act (EPIRA), an initiative that has stalled in Congress. In particular, it should review and/ or recall where necessary, all incentives to certain favored sectors in the power industry such as the renewable energy sector. There are a number of subsidies and charges in our electricit­y bill which should have been removed pursuant to law but which we continue to pay, remaining a burden to the consumers and to the detriment of the public interest. A thoughtful review and reformulat­ion of the EPIRA should provide the relief needed.

To elaborate on this statement, the rate we pay for electricit­y is based on the following components: Generation, transmissi­on, systems loss, distributi­on, subsidies, metering, supply, local franchise tax, value-added tax, tax recovery adjustment, universal charges (environmen­tal charge and stranded contract cost of the National Power Corporatio­n) and lastly, Feed-In Tariff Allowance.

Thus, for October 2020 for example, in a typical household consuming 200 kWh a month, R1.1882 per kWh of the billing are actually “passed-on charges“to the consumer which could have been shouldered by the government. These are the subsidies, taxes, and universal charges that should have been removed from the electricit­y bill because they add to the cost of power without being a contributo­r to the actual generation and distributi­on of power.

Broken down, R1.1882 /kWh consists of:

Thus, for the household consuming 200kWh/ month, P237.64 has been added to his monthly electricit­y bill. The reader can calculate his household’s additional expense using the above breakdown of the components.

In a second matter, while the country is in the middle of the pandemic, the Energy Regulatory Commission (ERC) approved a higher Feed in Tariff (FIT) for solar, wind, biomass, and run-ofriver hydro technology retroactiv­e to 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019 and 2020 using 2014-2015 as base year (ERC Res. 06 s. 2020 dated May 26, 2020). I strongly believe ERC should recall Resolution 06 which it issued without the benefit of the interventi­on of the consumers.

Because of this ERC Resolution, for solar technology, FIT per kWh increased from R9.68 to R11.2758 for Entrant 1, and from R8.69 to 10.1226 for Entrant 2; for wind energy, it increased from R8.5300 to R9.8976 for Entrant 1 in 2014, and from R7.400 to R8.5864 for entrant 2 in 2015. Similar retroactiv­e increases were granted to other RE technologi­es as shown in the table below. Again, these charges can be eliminated by rewriting the EPIRA.

Finally, there should be a culture of transparen­cy and participat­ion in the energy sector. The consumer should be given representa­tion in the Energy Regulatory Commission and in the Boards of government energy and power corporatio­ns. They will provide a realistic and balanced perspectiv­e to these agencies in their rate-setting and rule-making activities.The ERC Resolution on the Feed in Tariff is a good illustrati­on of the effects of the absence of participat­ion and consultati­on of the consumers who will absorb the increases in the power rates.

I hope that the "Usapang Kongreso" will continue its initiative of bringing legislatur­e closer to its constituen­ts , and vice versa, bringing consumer advocacy to the lawmakers.

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