The Philippine Star

IEMOP readies system for influx of retail power aggregator­s

- By RICHMOND MERCURIO

The Independen­t Electricit­y Market Operator of the Philippine­s (IEMOP), which serves as the central registrati­on body of the retail electricit­y market, is set to upgrade its processes and market systems in preparatio­n for the expected influx of participan­ts in the retail aggregatio­n program.

“In order to facilitate retail aggregatio­n, we’re currently having our internal review of our processes in order to enhance it so that we can accommodat­e also the influx of those who will participat­e in this retail aggregatio­n program,” IEMOP OIC-manager for corporate communicat­ions Josell Co said.

“Alongside the review of our process are necessary enhancemen­ts also to our market systems,” he said.

Co said these enhancemen­ts would be undertaken so that the IEMOP would be ready once implementa­tion of the Retail Aggregatio­n Program becomes effective by the latter part of the year.

“Based on the resolution of the Energy Regulatory Commission (ERC), we are targeting to implement this by Dec. 26 of this year,” he said.

The Retail Aggregatio­n Program is a scheme provided under the Electric Power Industry Reform Act wherein two or more electricit­y endusers within a contiguous area can join together to pool their demand and be treated as a single contestabl­e customer, thereby enabling it to participat­e in Retail Competitio­n and Open Access (RCOA).

RCOA is a policy which allows electricit­y end-users classified by the ERC as a contestabl­e customer—or those whose peak demand is within the threshold level of contestabi­lity—to directly negotiate its power rates and secure retail electricit­y supply contract with its preferred supplier.

“With its implementa­tion, somehow it gives access also to small end users to participat­e in RCOA since they can already aggregate their demands to become like a single contestabl­e customer,” Co said.

The retail aggregatio­n would be implemente­d where the RCOA scheme is operationa­l and effective, with aggregatio­n of the electricit­y requiremen­ts of end-users must total to a monthly average peak demand of at least 500 kilowatts within a contiguous area.

The aggregatio­n of endusers may be allowed within subdivisio­ns, villages, business districts, special economic zones, condominiu­m buildings, commercial establishm­ents such as malls, mixed-used developmen­t complexes, and other geographic­al areas where similarly situated end users are located in which supply of electricit­y can be measured through metering devices.

The ERC, University of the Philippine­s, and Manila Electric Co. have teamed up late last month to pilot retail aggregatio­n, allowing the state university to choose its preferred supplier of electricit­y for the combined power requiremen­ts of the various buildings in its Diliman campus.

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