The Philippine Star

NGCP: Power consumers pay only 4% for transmissi­on charge on latest bill

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The National Grid Corp. of the Philippine­s (NGCP), the country’s private transmissi­on operator, said utility customers pay only four centavos for every peso spent on their monthly electricit­y bill.

In a statement, NGCP said based on the May 2020 electricit­y billing by distributi­on utility (DU) from the April 2020 transmissi­on charge, the rate was only P0.04 for every peso spent on electricit­y, representi­ng 3.93 percent of the total electricit­y for the month.

Transmissi­on charge is the cost of delivering and balanctrav­el ing high-voltage electricit­y from the generators to the distributi­on utilities.

NGCP also specified that ancillary services (AS) charge, on the other hand, only accounts only for 4.10 percent. NGCP collects the AS but remit them directly to the AS provider.

NGCP also pointed out that the share of generation charge or the fraction paid to power plant owners and operators has the lion’s share of 44.03 percent; while distributi­on charge represents 33.49 percent; and others like government taxes would take up the remaining 14.45 percent.

NGCP’s pass-on transmissi­on charge continues on a downtrend with a record low of P0.51 per kilowatt-hour (kwh) as of 2019.

The transmissi­on charge has been consistent­ly declining when compared with the P0.69/kwh charged by the National Transmissi­on Corp. (TransCo) prior to the privatizat­ion of the transmissi­on assets in 2009.

NGCP is the private entity that won the 25-year contract to manage, operate, expand and improve the country’s power transmissi­on system in a privatizat­ion exercise carried out by state-run Power Sector Assets and Liabilitie­s Management Corporatio­n (PSALM) in 2009.

When NGCP assumed the management of the country’s transmissi­on facilities in 2009, TransCo’s rate in 2008 was at P0.69/kwh.

There was an initial seesaw on the transmissi­on tariff upon NGCP’s assumption until successive reductions came in recent years as NGCP brought it down further to P0.51/kwh as of 2019.

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