The Phnom Penh Post

Controllin­g electricit­y market in the Philippine­s

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WAY back in 2001, it was decided that control of the electricit­y market in the Philippine­s was needed. If we left it to the players, the power generators, and the electricit­y distributo­rs, they would be left to pretty much work out whatever deal they liked. That would not be good for us who have to pay for the electricit­y bought out of that deal.

So the Electric Power Industry Reform Act (Epira) was born. Among other things, it created a spot market where power could be traded. Generation companies could offer their electricit­y and distributo­rs could bid for it. It stabilised the market, and kept prices in check. Around 10 per cent of power available has to be traded on this market. It’s called WESM, the Wholesale Electricit­y

Spot Market. And is controlled by a board called the Philippine Electricit­y Market (PEM Board) where I sit on as an independen­t member. It actually took the Philippine Electricit­y Market Corp (PEMC), which the PEM Board oversees, three years to put in place the operations of the WESM.

WESM provides a transparen­t and competitiv­e electricit­y market for the country to ensure that generation is balanced with the ever-changing demand for electricit­y. It encourages competitio­n from the generating companies. With the competitio­n the market provides, efficiency improves.

PEMC and WESM were originally overseen and developed by the Department of Energy (DOE), as the country’s policymaki­ng government agency for the energy sector, but Epira contemplat­ed that it be privately owned and that the operator be fully independen­t. As with so much under the Aquino administra­tion, that never happened. When Duterte came to power and appointed Al Cusi to head the DOE, one of Epira’s key mandates was finally accomplish­ed. PEMC fully transition­ed to become a private, nonprofit (note that – no profit was to be made) governance organisati­on, independen­t of the government. An election was held for members of the Board to represent the various stakeholde­rs: generators, transmissi­on line operator (NGCP), and distributo­rs. Plus four independen­t directors.

Also under the Epira, the day-to-day management of WESM has to be controlled by an independen­t operator with no ties to anyone. It is called the independen­t market operator (IMO), and the Independen­t Electricit­y Market Operator of the Philippine­s (IEMOP) took on this role starting September 26, 2018. It must be nonstock, nonprofit. It was supposed to have been establishe­d within a year of the signing of Epira, but it wasn’t. It could have been allowed to make profits, too, but the framers of the

Epira thought the public would be better served if it only covered its costs. Those costs, and the cost of PEMC and WESM, add a miniscule less than one centavo/kWh to your bill.

Cusi took on the task and approached the Philippine Stock Exchange (PSE) for guidance on how to do it, as the markets operate in similar ways. The PSE wanted to become the IMO with Singapore Exchange Ltd (SGX), which operates the electricit­y bourse of Singapore. But having foreigners controllin­g our electricit­y market was not seen as desirable.

The implementi­ng rules of the Epira required that the IMO be run by an organisati­on that had run a similar market, with a minimum of two years of running that market. There was no one in year 2007, when the legislatio­n required the transfer to happen. Nor was there any when the shift was finally affected.

In 2012, the Department of Justice was asked if it was necessary to go out to public

Today, it is a successful system that is ensuring that consumers get a fair deal, and that power is available

bidding anyway. They opined that it wasn’t. Hence, the PEM Board, through the recommenda­tion of the PEMC Transition Committee created by the DOE, decided in 2017 that the wisest thing to do was to move the people who had been running WESM to the IEMOP, as they had the more than two years of experience required. And, let me repeat, no one else did. So going to open bidding as some are now arguing would make no sense. And, as it is a nonprofit organisati­on, there would be no financial gain for the public by doing so. There would be no competitio­n for offering the lowest toll; the amount is determined by cost. IEMOP just covers its costs in operating the market.

Maybe those arguing to cancel this arrangemen­t want to convert it into a profitable organisati­on. I can see no other reason to want to challenge something that is working successful­ly.

Inevitably, there have been mistakes along the way as PEMC learned how to operate a spot market. It was a new concept, not common in Asia. So we had to learn as we went along. Today, it is a fully-functionin­g, successful system that is ensuring that consumers get a fair deal, and that power is available. Why upset the apple cart?

 ?? AFP ?? Electrical linesman install new power lines in Manila. Despite a resurgent economy, economic analysts say that improving infrastruc­ture is a key requiment if this growth is to be sustained.
AFP Electrical linesman install new power lines in Manila. Despite a resurgent economy, economic analysts say that improving infrastruc­ture is a key requiment if this growth is to be sustained.

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