The Borneo Post (Sabah)

How tariffs are determined for energy consumers

- — Bernama

KUALA LUMPUR: As the next six-month deadline (June 30) draws nearer for the Energy Commission (EC) to reflect changes in fuel and generation costs in electricit­y tariffs, some quarters expect to see electricit­y tariffs being reduced to match the internatio­nal pricing of gas and coal.

As two-thirds of our electricit­y bill come from fuel and generation costs, lower internatio­nal prices of gas and coal recently may have triggered such expectatio­ns.

Coal and gas are the two primary fuel in generating electricit­y in Peninsular Malaysia.

Around 41 per cent of the power plants are coal-fired and 47 per cent more are natural gas plants.

Naturally, this implies Malaysia is susceptibl­e to global fuel prices.

Of late, spot coal cargo prices for exports from Australia’s Newcastle terminal have fallen by more than 25 per cent from US$118 per tonne in July 2018 to about US$88 per tonne currently.

Asian liquid natural gas (LNG) spot prices for May deliveries reportedly dropped more than 60 per cent from US$11.81 per MMBtu in September 2018 to around US$4.65 this week.

So, can the easing coal and gas prices in recent weeks translate into rebates? Of interest here is that the tariff structure has not changed since 2014.

Under the current Imbalance Cost Pass-Through (ICPT) mechanism, the EC reflects changes in fuel and generation costs in the electricit­y tariffs, either as a rebate or surcharge in a review done every six months.

And this is subject to government approval.

The current ICPT mechanism is for between Jan 1 and June 30, 2019 while the next is from between July 1 and Dec 31, 2019.

The mechanism falls under the framework of the Incentiveb­ased Regulation (IBR) that was introduced in 2014.

In line with global standards, ICPT promotes a fair and transparen­t tariff setting.

Tariffs are determined by the EC when it evaluates the pricing structure and cost of fuel every six months with a six-month lag in implementa­tion.

If the overall actual cost of fuel in the previous six months is higher than the forecasted cost of production of electricit­y, then a surcharge will be imposed on consumers in the subsequent six months.

But if the actual cost is lower, then consumers can enjoy a reduction or rebate in the following six months.

The current average base tariff, as decided last year is 39.45 sen per kWh.

The rate is usually reviewed once every three years as the EC has set that level of base tariff for 2018, 2019 and 2020.

Every six months, the EC looks at the internatio­nal pricing structure and compares it to the base fuel price of generating electricit­y, to determine whether there would be a ICPT surcharge or a rebate, said an industry source.

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