Business World

DoE consulting with NGCP on power reserves of grid operator

- By Victor V. Saulon Sub-Editor

THE DEPARTMENT of Energy (DoE) has met with officials of the National Grid Corporatio­n of the Philippine­s (NGCP) to assess the reserved power available to the privately owned grid operator as part of “ancillary services” it is providing to consumers.

“We asked for an accounting of where the ancillary services are,” DoE Secretary Alfonso G. Cusi told reporters. He was referring to where NGCP is sourcing reserved power supply, which he said should not be coming from the same generation plants that also serve the distributi­on utilities.

Ancillary services broadly cover transmissi­on reserve capacity that is needed to maintain the power quality, reliabilit­y, and security of the grid.

Mr. Cusi said an unschedule­d outage in a power plant from which a utility draws its supply means the grid operator will also lose its source of reserves if these come from the same “bucket.”

“We need to have our electricit­y supply to really be reliable, sustainabl­e,” he said.

Mr. Cusi said the discussion­s were a “breakthrou­gh” but acknowledg­ed that “We need another meeting.”

“There are scheduled meetings and we set a timeline until the end of the month,” he said, adding that the two sides are willing to resolve the issue on ancillary services that would entail cost to NGCP.

“DoE is working to protect the interest of the consumers. We have to be transparen­t about it. So the consumers ought to know the expectatio­ns,” he said.

NGCP has layers of reserved energy that it uses to stabilize the fluctuatin­g power demanded from the electricit­y grid.

A frequency regulating reserve is the standard operating requiremen­t to maintain a balance between available capacity and system demand. The regulating reserve is ideally equivalent to 4% of the demand for the hour.

On top of the regulating reserve, NGCP also maintains a contingenc­y reserve that it allocates to immediatel­y answer any reduction in supply when the largest power generating unit online fails to deliver.

Aside from these reserves, the operator also maintains a dispatchab­le reserve that is readily available to replenish lost contingenc­y reserve.

When these reserves fall below ideal levels, NGCP issues a “yellow alert,” which is downgraded to a “red alert” when the supply situation worsens.

NGCP previously said it would continue to pursue its mandate of finding ancillary services, which in the past had been pooled together with supply.

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