Panay News

ERC proposes conversion of fines into customer refunds

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THE Energy Regulatory Commission ( ERC ) i s proposing to utilize penalties to be paid by violating power industry players as refunds to consumers affected by power outages.

This was t he ERC ’ s proposed amendment to Republic Act 9136 or the Electric Power Industry Reform Act (EPIRA) of 2001, amid its ongoing probe into the four-day widespread blackout that crippled Western Visayas early this month.

The ERC on Friday, Jan. 12, said its chairperso­n and CEO Monalisa Dimalanta raised the idea during the congressio­nal inquiry into the region-wide power outage at the House of Representa­tives on Thursday, Jan. 11.

The EPIRA gives the ERC the power to impose penalties ranging from P50,000 to P50 million for violations by power industry players.

The penalties collected by the power industry regulator, however, are being remitted to the National Treasury as part of the state’s coffers.

“In fact, one of the recommenda­tions that we made for the EPIRA amendment is to [ give] ERC the authority to order the applicatio­n of penalties for return, either in the form of refunds or discounts, to the consumers that suffer the inconvenie­nce or the violation that resulted in the interrupti­on of service,” said Dimalanta.

She added: “Right now, we don’t have the authority. But if there is an amendment in the law, then we can have that authority to make the applicatio­n.”

In the first week of 2024, Panay Island was crippled by a massive power outage after multiple trippings of power plants.

Both President Ferdinand Marcos J r. and Energy secretary Raphael Lotilla blamed the National Grid Corporatio­n of the Philippine­s ( NGCP), pointing out that the grid operator could have prevented a system collapse had it acted during a two-hour window to implement manual load dropping or rotational brownouts to maintain the integrity of the island’s power grid.

The NGCP, in its defense, stood firm that the system, before the multiple tripping of power plant units, was normal and that its actions

were within protocols.

After two hours, however, six other large units consecutiv­ely collapsed, which caused the entire system to shut down.

The ERC said, following the Panay power shutdown, it instituted a proactive approach by mandating hourly updates from the grid operator instead of the previous four-hour intervals.

The power industry regulator also launched its own investigat­ion into the incident.

The ERC earlier said it would take about six to eight weeks for the agency to complete its probe.

In addition, the agency said it is completing the study on the reconstitu­tion of the compositio­n of t he Grid Management Committee (GMC) while assessing the most efficient legal framework for this reconstitu­tion.

The GMC is primarily in charge of monitoring t he implementa­tion of the Grid Code as well as reviewing and recommendi­ng standards, procedures, and requiremen­ts for the connection, operation, maintenanc­e, and developmen­t of the country’s power grid, it said.

 ?? ?? The Energy Regulatory Commission proposes that the penalties paid by violating power industry players would be return as refunds or discounts to consumers affected by power outages. Photo shows members of the low-income households attending the education campaigns on Lifeline Rate program in Dolores, Eastern Samar.
The Energy Regulatory Commission proposes that the penalties paid by violating power industry players would be return as refunds or discounts to consumers affected by power outages. Photo shows members of the low-income households attending the education campaigns on Lifeline Rate program in Dolores, Eastern Samar.

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