Philippine Daily Inquirer

DOE, ERC slammed over spate of alerts

- —STORY BY MARLON RAMOS

Senators on Tuesday dressed down energy regulators for their failure to physically inspect power plants and act on applicatio­ns for new energy facilities that would have averted power outages in several areas. They took to task the senior officials of the Department of Energy (DOE) and the Energy Regulatory Commission (ERC) for conducting only “desk monitoring” of power plants.

Senators on Tuesday dressed down energy regulators for their failure to physically inspect power plants and act on applicatio­ns for new energy facilities that would have averted the power outages in several areas across the country.

They took to task the senior officials of the Department of Energy (DOE) and the Energy Regulatory Commission (ERC) after they admitted that they were only conducting “desk monitoring” of power plants instead of personally checking the conditions of these facilities.

At a Senate hearing on the frequent issuance of red and yellow alerts since April, Sen. Francis Escudero said the two agencies had been sitting on the processing of permits for the constructi­on of new energy generators.

He said the inordinate delay had deprived the country of as much as 2,250 megawatts of electricit­y.

“If these new power plants [had become operationa­l], we would not have suffered these red and yellow alerts,” Escudero said at the hearing of the Senate committee on energy.

“I really don’t understand why the approval for new power plants is being blocked or prolonged,” he said, adding that the shortage in energy sources had resulted in more expensive electricit­y rates in the country.

“The basic principle of supply and demand applies to the energy sector. If there’s a lack in power supply, the cost of electricit­y is high. If there’s plenty of supply, electricit­y rates are cheaper,” he explained.

Escudero directed the regulators to submit to the Senate panel the status of all pending applicatio­ns for proposed power plants.

‘Not doing your job’

Sen. Raffy Tulfo, the panel chair, likewise quizzed the ERC and DOE officials on their monitoring of the maintenanc­e operations of generating plants following the series of power outages.

“We have heard reports that the power plants bogged down because they are already too old and not properly maintained. These are the reasons why we are having outages,” Tulfo said.

Fielding questions from Tulfo, ERC Director Sharon Montañer admitted that the commission was not conducting regular maintenanc­e inspection of power plants.

“So it could take 10 years, 50 years or 100 years before you carry out inspection and that’s okay with you? That’s the cause of our problems,” Tulfo told Montañer.

“You are not doing your job there in the ERC. Like vehicles, power plants should be well-maintained for them to function properly,” he added.

Montañer later clarified that they actually inspect power plants before the ERC approves their rate applicatio­ns and five years after the start of their operation.

“Do you think that’s enough?” Tulfo asked the ERC official.

“Ideally, [the inspection should be conducted] once a year,” Montañer replied. “Admittedly, what we do is desk monitoring based on the benchmarks that we set.”

Escudero said nine out of 10 outages in the past three years were actually due to unplanned shutdowns of power plants.

On April 16 alone, he said power plants in Luzon had eight planned outages and 35 unplanned outages while those in Visayas and Mindanao had a total of 58 unplanned shutdowns.

The ERC official admitted that the commission did not have personnel assigned to visit the actual sites, ading that it only depends on the reports submitted by generating companies.

“It’s good if they will declare against their interest and say that there is something wrong with their plants. And they usually don’t,” Escudero said.

“So they will say everything is good and dandy. These are private corporatio­ns that are for profit. Because you are dependent on their submission­s, nobody actually from ERC or even the DOE goes to the plant,” he added.

‘Limited staff’

Montañer said the ERC had formed an ad hoc group late last year to monitor the performanc­e of power plants and to check their operations remotely.

This incensed Tulfo, who said: “Desk monitoring from the air-conditione­d room of your inspector? That’s BS. What I am trying to say here is there should be someone, an expert on power plants, who would go there physically and inspect.”

Escudero noted that, unlike in the private sector, government regulators did not have experts who have a full understand­ing of the operations of power facilities.

Montañer pointed out the “limited number of staff” in her agency.

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