Business World

Brownouts, ancillary services and regulation of transmissi­on charge

Brownouts and expensive electricit­y, these are ironic events in our modern world.

- BIENVENIDO S. OPLAS, JR. BIENVENIDO S. OPLAS, JR. is the head of Minimal Government Thinkers and a Fellow of SEANET and Stratbase-ADRi. minimalgov­ernment@gmail.com

Rotational and scheduled brownouts for several hours about once a month, then unschedule­d short brownouts from time to time, have become a regular experience in the two provinces of Negros island. Despite the installati­on of many huge solar plants in recent years.

I am currently in Sagay hospital in Negros Occidental to visit my seriously sick father. Last night, there was brownout for about 10 minutes, the hospital’s generator set immediatel­y takes over to supply electricit­y to their patients and staff.

The Facebook page of the Central Negros Electric Cooperativ­e (CENECO) gives frequent advisory of power interrupti­on that lasts for nine hours (8 a.m. to 5 p.m.) until this month.

Stories and testimonie­s of frequent brownouts in many cities and municipali­ties of Negros Oriental in 2016 are also reported in

In June 2016, the Department of Energy (DoE) said that line congestion is building up in Negros Occidental due to many solar power plants operating in the province. The abrupt influx of solar power plants is causing the main line, transmissi­on and interconne­ction lines to congest ( June 10, 2016).

This month, Negros Occidental Electric Cooperativ­e ( NOCECO) explained that one of the main reasons of higher electricit­y is the increase in the transmissi­on charge from P1.0538/ kWh in January 2017 to P1.1777/kWh in February 2017 or an increase of 0.1239/kWh. The transmissi­on rate hike is due to the increase in the ancillary service charges of the National Grid Corporatio­n of the Philippine­s (NGCP).

There are at least two issues here. First is the presence of more brownouts in Negros island despite its having the most number of installed solar power plants per sq. km. of land in the whole country, more than 300 MW.

Solar power is very unstable and intermitte­nt, zero output at night and very low output when dumaguetei­nfo.com. Sun Star Bacolod, it is cloudy, or power fluctuates wildly if clouds come and go in minutes. So there should be more ancillary services or standby power plants, usually natural gas or diesel plants, that should quickly provide power when thick clouds come and when evening comes. Still, this causes power fluctuatio­ns that damage machines, engines and appliances running on electricit­y and the leadership of Negros chamber of commerce and industry have pointed this out to the DoE and NGCP last year.

Second, how is the NGCP regulated and accounted in its transmissi­on charge pricing and assets management?

Power generation is deregulate­d and hence, the extent of competitio­n among many players is the main regulator of the generation charge. Distributi­on charge is regulated by the Energy Regulatory Commission (ERC) because distributi­on utilities (DUs) like Meralco and the roughly 119 electric cooperativ­es ( ECs) nationwide are all monopolies in their respective franchise areas.

So while there are 120+ distributi­on monopolies composed of private DUs and ECs, the NGCP is a single, national monopoly in power transmissi­on.

There are 12 different charges in our monthly electricit­y bill. The top six in the table below, and these five charges with lesser rates: ( 7) universal charge, ( 8) cross subsidy charge, (9) lifeline rate subsidy, (10) senior citizen subsidy, and (11) feed in tariff allowance ( FiT-All). No. ( 12) are value-added tax ( VAT) and other government taxes, these are huge too but not included in the table because they are unrelated to the electricit­y system.

Of these 12 different charges, subsidies and taxes, the smallest is #10 while the fastest growing is #11, FiT-All: P0.04/kWh in 2015, 0.124/kWh in 2016, and set to rise to P0.23- P0.25/ kWh this 2017, the ERC still has to decide on the Transco petition for FiT-All hike (see table).

Notice in the table above the following: ( 1) In 2013 vs. 2017, all five charges have declined in rates in 2017 except transmissi­on charge which has remained practicall­y the same at P0.91/ kWh. And (2)In 2014 vs. 2015, a similar pattern where all five charges have declined in rates in 2015 except transmissi­on charge which has even increased to nearly P1/ kWh.

The possible explanatio­ns why the transmissi­on charge by NGCP seems to be the odd man out among the top six charges are (1) rising cost of more ancillary services as more intermitte­nt solar-wind power are added into the grid, (2) it passes its own system loss to the transmissi­on charge, (3) it simply behaves like a typical monopoly, revenuemax­imizing as consumers and other players have zero option of other service supplier/s.

Brownouts and expensive electricit­y, these are ironic events in our modern world. We should have stable and cheap electricit­y, no brownouts even for one minute except after heavy storms and typhoons that knock down electrical posts and power lines.

Government should step back in some heavy regulation­s like forcing intermitte­nt solar-wind into the grid which can discourage some developers who can build stable and cheaper power like coal and natgas plants. And giving high price guaranty for 20 years to renewables like windsolar is wrong and punishing the consumers. Technology changes very fast, the costs of solar and wind equipment are falling fast, so why lock the high price for 20 years? This is wrong. n

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