Business World

ERC says most parties to ancillary-services supply deals willing to sign firm contracts

- By Angelica Y. Yang Reporter

THE ENERGY Regulatory Commission (ERC) said 28 of 35 entities holding “nonfirm” contracts with the grid operator to provide reserve power are willing to convert their agreements into firm contracts.

The commission has said before that the system operator, the National Grid Corp. of the Philippine­s (NGCP), is re-negotiatin­g non-firm ancillary service (AS) procuremen­t agreements (ASPAs) with 35 entities, and is seeking their conversion to firm contracts.

“Of the 35, 28 have already manifested their intent to be converted. (After expressing their willingnes­s), they may file jointly with NGCP for its approval,” ERC Commission­er-in-Charge Floresinda G. Baldo-Digal told BusinessWo­rld on Viber last week.

However, the ERC has yet to receive a joint applicatio­n requesting the commission’s approval for ASPA conversion, she added.

“Under the law, we can give provisiona­l authority to implement the contract for a firm AS within 75 days from filing then decide a year after,” Ms. Digal said.

Five months ago, the Department of Energy (DoE) flagged the NGCP for not fully entering into firm contracts to purchase reserve power, making it non-compliant with a previous department circular.

The Luzon grid’s required capacity for regulating, contingenc­y and dispatchab­le reserves is 491 megawatts (MW), 647 MW, and 647 MW, respective­ly.

The DoE estimates that the Luzon grid’s regulating, contingenc­y and dispatchab­le reserves from non-firm contracts are at 525 MW, 395 MW and 806 MW, respective­ly, as of the fourth quarter of 2020.

Under non-firm ASPAs, the AS provider decides when it will provide services even if these had been previously scheduled by the NGCP, an arrangemen­t which compromise­s grid reliabilit­y, the Department of Energy (DoE) said in April.

According to a DoE department circular released two years ago, the NGCP is required to procure 100% of firm-contracted reserves to guarantee the grid’s reliabilit­y.

In June, NGCP President and Chief Executive Officer Anthony L. Almeda said in a statement that procuring reserves through firm or non-firm deals will not solve the recurring power interrupti­ons.

He said the full contractin­g of AS will “only lead to a change in payment terms where all the power, used or unused, will be shouldered by the public.”

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