The Philippine Star

ERC chief tells Meralco, power utilities to refund customers

- By DANESSA RIVERA

Distributi­on utilities and electric cooperativ­es that violated billing rules during the lockdown will be asked to refund the overcharge­d amount to consumers, according to the Energy Regulatory Commission.

ERC chair Agnes Devanadera made this clear at the Laging Handa public briefing yesterday, as she scored some power distributo­rs for violating the commission’s order not to charge customers the feed-in tariff allowance (FIT-All) and universal charge-environmen­tal charge (UCEC).

“What we did is we ordered the non-payment of FIT-All for two months to help lower electricit­y rates.

There were some distributi­on utilities that still charged customers. We also ordered the suspension of the UCEC collection but some distributi­on utilities still charged their customers. These are violations of ERC orders,” she said.

The agency ordered the deferral of the FIT-All charge in April and May in considerat­ion of the enhanced community quarantine.

The FIT-All, which covers payments to renewable energy developers, amounts to P0.0495 per kwh and is collected by the National Transmissi­on Corp. (TransCo).

Meanwhile, the ERC indefinite­ly suspended the collection of UC-EC amounting to P0.0025 per kwh beginning in June.

In view of the violations, Devanadera

said the power regulator would issue an order today, directing distributi­on utilities and electric cooperativ­es to refund their customers immediatel­y.

“We’ve written those that committed violations of their administra­tive sanctions. At times like this, they should not violate government orders aimed to protect the people,” she said.

The ERC chief’s statement came after the Senate committee on energy asked the agency to penalize distributi­on utilities that failed to comply with its advisories and directives aimed at alleviatin­g the financial difficulti­es of Filipino power consumers reeling from strict quarantine measures.

Sen. Sherwin Gatchalian said the

Senate committee on energy received at least 204 complaints from 179 complainan­ts. Out of the 179 complainan­ts, 176 are complaints against Manila Electric Co. (Meralco) and three against several electric cooperativ­es.

Even the senator himself complained about his billing statement for the month of May, pointing out that Meralco failed to explain that the adjustment­s had already been made when he was billed P23,000 for his accumulate­d electricit­y consumptio­n from March to May.

Meralco’s violations included failure to clearly indicate the word “estimate” on the bill, as well as provide line item breakdown for monthly installmen­t. Meralco was also faulted for collecting UC-EC and FIT-ALL during the period specified in ERC advisories, according to the senator.

Citing a report from the ERC, Gatchalian said at least six distributi­on utilities have violated the ERC advisories. These are Olongapo Electricit­y Distributi­on Co, Misamis Oriental II Electric Cooperativ­e Inc., Camarines Sur II Electric Cooperativ­e Inc., Central Negros Electric Cooperativ­e Inc., Iloilo III Electric Cooperativ­e Inc. and Batangas II Electric Cooperativ­e Inc.

The ERC had received 47,000 bill complaints via text, e-mail and its official Facebook page.

Devanadera said Meralco president and CEO Ray Espinosa himself had assured ERC that corrective measures would be put in place after customers experience­d bill shock with their March to June electricit­y bills.

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