Business World

Palace signs into law measure cutting red tape from energy projects

- Arjay L. Balinbin

PRESIDENT Rodrigo R. Duterte has signed the Energy Virtual One-Stop Shop Act, which seeks to streamline the permit-issuing process for power generation, transmissi­on, and distributi­on projects.

PRESIDENT Rodrigo R. Duterte has signed the Energy Virtual One-Stop Shop (EVOSS) Act, which seeks to streamline the permit-issuing process for power generation, transmissi­on, and distributi­on projects.

Malacañang released to reporters on Thursday a copy of Republic Act No. 11234, which Mr. Duterte signed on March 8.

The law provides for the establishm­ent of an Energy Virtual One-Stop Shop, to be supervised by the Department of Energy (DoE).

The DoE is authorized to operate and maintain “an effective informatio­n technology infrastruc­ture system, which shall be updated regularly, subject to the provisions of this Act.”

The new law applies to all new power generation, transmissi­on, and distributi­on projects and all government agencies, including local government units (LGUs), and government-owned or -controlled corporatio­ns (GOCCs) involved in the permit-issuing process of power generation, transmissi­on, or distributi­on projects.

EVOSS will serve as “an online payment system for all fees imposed for applicatio­ns for permits and/or certificat­ions necessary for, or related to, applicatio­ns for power generation, transmissi­on, or distributi­on projects.”

EVOSS will also provide “a secure and accessible system for all government bureaus, offices, agencies, GOCCs, LGUs, and other entities involved in the permitting process.”

In a statement, the Senate said that under the law, “all government agencies involved will be required to follow a strict timeframe to act on pending applicatio­ns. The failure of an agency to act within the prescribed timeframe will result in the automatic approval of said applicatio­n and potential administra­tive sanctions against inefficien­t public officers to penalize the delay.”

“On the other hand, private entities — the system operator and market operator — who fail to act within the prescribed timeframe will be slapped with a P100,000 fine per day of delay,” it also said.

“The greater efficiency under the EVOSS system will result in a welcome bump in disposable income for the average Filipino family. We will be putting a lot of money back where it belongs — in the pockets of Filipino families struggling to pay their basic day to day expenses,” Senator Sherwin T. Gatchalian, chair of the Senate Committee on Energy, was quoted as saying. —

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