Daily Tribune (Philippines)

Power reserve market seen by June

- BY MARIA ROMERO @tribunephl_mbr

A power reserve market, which will help ensure a stable power supply for consumers by storing and trading ancillary reserves, is expected to be commercial­ly available by June once the Energy Regulatory Commission green lights its operations.

“The DoE (Department of Energy) targets to pursue the commercial operations of the reserve market in June. This means that the ERC has to approve the PDM (price determinat­ion methodolog­y),” Engr. Robinson P. Descanzo, chief operating officer of the Independen­t Electricit­y Market Operator of the Philippine­s, told reporters Thursday.

Descanzo said the PDM will govern how power supply will be traded in the reserve market.

In a text message to the Daily Tribune, ERC chairperso­n, Atty. Monalisa Dimalanta confirmed that the state-run power regulator also hopes to launch the reserve market by the middle of the year.

“That’s our working target but it will depend on the progress of hearings once they begin. We have yet to deliberate on the PDM since the hearings have not yet started,” Dimalanta said.

The ERC is set to conduct a hearing in Cebu on 16 March, Davao on 23 March, and Manila by the end of March to early April. The results of the hearing will be used by the ERC to deliberate on the pricing scheme.

Least-cost basis

The reserve market design approved by the DoE through Department Circular DC201912-0018 and DC2021-03-0009 allows reserve capacities to be traded in the Wholesale Electricit­y Spot Market.

Once the new market is running, reserves will also be scheduled on the least-cost basis through a more competitiv­e and transparen­t landscape.

Isidro Cacho, IEMOP Head of the Corporate Strategy and Communicat­ions Department, said pursuing a reserve market is among the strategies being explored to provide consumers with uninterrup­ted power supply, even during peak seasons.

“It’s just waiting for approval from the ERC. And based on the policy released by the DoE, NGCP (National Grid Corporatio­n of the Philippine­s) will be the single buyer,” he added.

The NGCP, which holds a 25-year franchise to solely operate the power transmissi­on assets of the government, is mandated to secure power reserves for contingenc­y.

IEMOP, meanwhile, is actively coordinati­ng with the DoE and the ERC to help stabilize electricit­y prices in the market.

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