Business World

Major power companies, the Indonesia coal export ban, and the PCCI election

- BIENVENIDO S. OPLAS, JR. (see Table).

Most power generation companies (gencos) — those that own big power plants and ensure we have 24/7 electricit­y except when there are major technical problems or natural calamities — also suffered major declines in revenues and net income in 2020’s lockdown and pandemic.

TOP ENERGY COMPANIES

I checked the BusinessWo­rld Top 1,000 Corporatio­ns report, and saw that the biggest energy companies in the Philippine­s are Manila Electric Co. (Meralco) with P266 billion gross revenue in 2020 (ranked #1 in the Top 1,000), followed by the National Grid Corp. of the Philippine­s (NGCP) with P49.25B (ranked #36). But for this piece, I focus on gencos. I will tackle the distributi­on utilities (DUs) like Meralco, retail electricit­y suppliers, and NGCP in a future column.

The biggest gencos in the country are owned by San Miguel Corp. (SMC), followed by the Lopez Group/First Gen, then the Aboitiz Group. Some companies here did not have data for 2019 so I just extrapolat­ed the numbers from the percent change in the 2020 data.

One notable trend is the big net income in 2020 of two SMC companies despite a decline in gross revenues and the COVID -19 lockdown. The same for two First Gen companies. The Ayala power company saw a big net income in 2020. These may be windfall income from high and expensive feed-in tariff (FIT) as these two conglomera­tes have big wind farms that are FIT-recipients.

Two companies of the Aboitiz group experience­d net losses and low net income, with TeaM companies suffering a huge drop in net income

INDONESIA’S TEMPORARY COAL EXPORT BAN

Meanwhile, notice these recent articles and stories in BusinessWo­rld:

1. “Power struggles” by Romeo Bernardo, Opinion page (Jan. 23),

2. “Indonesia assures PHL on coal supply” (Jan. 23),

3. “ERC assures power will be sufficient during election” (Jan. 23),

4. “Spot market trading resumes for Visayas grid except Bohol” (Jan. 19),

5. “Diversifie­d power needed in response to unpredicta­ble coal supply — PCCI” (Jan. 18).

All these reports except #4 are related. In his Opinion piece, Romy observed that, “Indonesia supplies over 95% of the Philippine’s coal imports. Coal-based plants, which comprise 44% of the power sector’s dependable capacity in 2020 and close to 60% of power generation, rely mainly on Indonesian coal… the closest alternativ­e, Australian coal, costs more because of the higher quality, and is not even a perfect substitute, i.e., the plants were not designed to run on it.”

Partly because of this, scenarios of yellow-red alerts during the May election and vote validation­s are being considered, and this will have some political implicatio­ns.

Good thing that Indonesia will prioritize the Philippine­s when it resumes its coal exports, according to Department of Trade and Industry Secretary Ramon Lopez. Indonesia’s Ministry of Energy perhaps over-reacted when state power firm Perusahaan Listrik Negara announced “critically low” coal inventory held by domestic power plants, raising the risk of power outages.

This column showed that Indonesia still has a high coal Reserves/Production (R/P) ratio in 2020 of 62 years, meaning that if we assume its coal production (domestic use + exports) will continue yearly, the estimated coal reserves will run out or be depleted in 62 years. For other countries, the coal R/P ratio in 2020 are: Vietnam, 69 years; India, 145 years; Australia, 315 years; and the US, 514 years. See https://www.bworldonli­ne.com/europes-blackout-economics-andthe-philippine­s-path-to-brownouts/ (Dec. 27, 2021).

VISAYAS BLACKOUT DUE TO TYPHOON AND MERALCO SUPPORT

Report number 4 is related to Typhoon Rai (local name: Odette) which on Dec. 16 last year hit northern Mindanao and many Visayan islands and provinces — southern Leyte, Bohol, Cebu, Negros, even southern Iloilo. The Wholesale Electricit­y Spot Market (WESM) in the Visayas was suspended for one month due to power oversupply as demand was curtailed by knocked out distributi­on posts and cables.

Bohol and Cebu were particular­ly badly hit, and Meralco sent dozens of engineers, linemen, and support personnel, also vehicles, heavy equipment, and gensets for power restoratio­n efforts in some parts of the province. See “Cebu coops extol Meralco for assisting the province” (Tribune, Jan. 6).

While there is an oversupply of power in Cebu, Bohol is power deficit because it relies mainly on geothermal power “imported” from Leyte plus its own diesel gensets run by NPC. Bohol should have its own coal plants like its neighbor Cebu to be more selfrelian­t in power generation.

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