The Philippine Star

More Power rolls out upgrades for Iloilo power distributi­on network

- By DANESSA RIVERA

More Electric and Power Corp. (MORE Power) has started rolling out upgrades in Iloilo City’s power distributi­on network, bringing down system losses and addressing jumpers as part of its P1.8billion capital expenditur­e in the next three years.

In a statement, MORE Power said it has upgraded 51 distributi­on transforme­rs, replaced 51 broken electric poles and fixed 97 hotspot connectors in a span of only two months as part of a total upgrading program of the city’s aged and dilapidate­d electricit­y distributi­on system.

MORE Power president and COO Ruel Castro said the utility is spending P1.8 billion to rehabilita­te and upgrade Iloilo City’s power distributi­on system in the next three years as part of its program to improve electricit­y supply, lower the monthly bill paid by Ilonggos and improve its capacity to handle bigger demand from consumers and industries in the coming years.

Aside from improving the distributi­on system through upgrades, MORE Power also took steps to lower the monthly bills of Ilonggos by cutting down systems losses which reached 9.03 percent in 2019, as regular customers pay 6.5 percent of such losses.

Castro said technical experts have advised MORE Power that a high systems loss of 9.03 percent could mean there are 20,000 illegal connection­s in Iloilo City that remain untraced.

The new utility inherited all of the distributi­on facilities of Panay Electric Co. (PECO) after it took over the distributi­on system as the new congressio­nal franchise owner.

Castro said a technical study of the distributi­on system that MORE Power asked PECO’s sister company MIESCOR, it needs to conduct immediate preventive maintenanc­e work or upgrade almost all of the city’s distributi­on equipment, many of which remain manually operated because they were installed or put up during the 1950s and 1960s.

MIESCOR’s findings showed 9,000 hotspot connectors need to be upgraded or replaced so they would not cause system-wide damage. Four of the five power substation­s were found to carry over 90 percent load, a dangerous level that could cause damage to the distributi­on lines and safety switches as the safe level allowed is between 70 to 80 percent load capacity.

“If we will not do anything to fix these substation­s … one day one of these substation­s will fail and may cause a bigger problem (than the power supply outage applied during maintenanc­e works),” Castro said.

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