Manila Standard

Luzon power grid faces ‘yellow alert’ until June—ICSC

- By Alena Mae S. Flores

ENERGY think tank Institute for Climate and Sustainabl­e Cities said Tuesday the Luzon grid will likely be placed under yellow alert status reflecting thin power reserves starting the last week of April until mid-June.

ICSC issued the warning in its latest report titled “Luzon Power Outlook: Reviewing the Adequacy of Power Supply for April to June 2023” which examined the sufficienc­y of power supply in Luzon for the second quarter based on the power demand forecasts presented by the Department of Energy in March.

The report came a year after ICSC warned of a possible shortfall in the country’s power supply in the second quarter of 2022 in time for the national elections.

“Higher demand during summer lowers the available generating capacity from Weeks 17 [April 24 to 30] to 24 [June 12 to 18] of 2023. The supply can further deplete as forced outages of large baseload power plants can unexpected­ly occur in these times, likely pushing the system into yellow alert and near red alert levels,” said ICSC chief data scientist and author of the Luzon Power Outlook 2023 report Jephraim Manansala.

“This highlights the need to monitor the compliance of all power plants with the Grid Operating and Maintenanc­e Program plans of the National Grid Corporatio­n of the Philippine­s,” said Manansala.

ICSC cited the updated presentati­on of Energy Undersecre­tary Rowena Cristina Guevara forecastin­g a total of 15 weeks under yellow alert status in 2023, contrary to their initial estimate of 12 weeks and none under red alert status.

ICSC took into considerat­ion the DOE’s assumption­s, including peak demand requiremen­ts of 13,125 megawatts, no planned maintenanc­e outages and forced power plant outages amounting to about 600 MW in the second quarter this year.

ICSC said government and power industry players should ensure that power plants comply with NGCP’s GOMP by minimizing outages during this critical period to prevent the power supply from falling under red alert levels, leading to rotating power interrupti­ons in Luzon.

It said ancillary services should be sufficient to support power transmissi­on, and distributi­on utilities and participan­ts should implement the Interrupti­ble Load Program.

ICSC said the government should also closely watch the timely completion of power plants to provide additional capacity.

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