Manila Bulletin

Malampaya fund to retire PSALM debts

Consumers unburdened of universal charges

- By MYRNA M. VELASCO

The universal charges on stranded debts and stranded contract costs in the electric bills of Filipino consumers will soon disappear, with Congress already tapping the use of the Malampaya fund to retire the monstrous debts of Power Sector Assets and Liabilitie­s Management Corporatio­n.

In a legislativ­e measure that already passed third and final reading in the Senate,

billion of the Malampaya fund had been permitted to be applied in expunging power sector liabilitie­s that were placed under the charge of the state-owned firm.

Based on calculatio­ns, this legislativ­e branch-sponsored policy will reduce the bill of residentia­l end-users within the 200kilowat­t hour consumptio­n bracket by as much as per month or aggregated

annually.

The bill has been dubbed “Murang Kuryente Act,” although long-time industry watchers and experts view it as “the high price that Filipino consumers have been paying” relative to the failings committed in the privatizat­ion of the National Power Corporatio­n (NPC) assets.

Some NPC facilities were divested on a “fire sale” – including the independen­t power producer (IPP) contracts, of which capacity fees (or the cost of building the power plants) had not been given as burden to the asset buyers, yet they will assume ownership of the power facilities at “zero cost” at the end of the supply contracts. Those correspond­ing costs were instead passed on to the Filipino consumers.

Senate committee on energy chairman Sherwin T. Gatchalian guaranteed “check and balance” mechanisms in the use of the funds, with him emphasizin­g that the first step will be to use first the privatizat­ion revenues generated from divestment of power sector.

Notably, as of end-December 2018, the total liabilitie­s of PSALM were still at whopping billion, which infers then that the billion allocation from the Malampaya fund won’t still be enough to wipe out all of it.

“PSALM may only tap the fund after it has already applied the collection­s from its different sources of revenue,” the lawmaker said.

On the Malampaya fund’s applicatio­n to PSALM debt servicing, he stated that such shall be earmarked via the General Appropriat­ions Act or the national budget that also goes through the approval of Congress.

And if the energy resource special fund would still have surplus after paying off PSALM debts, this could be funneled to the government-underpinne­d electrific­ation and household power service connection­s across the country.

Gatchalian opined that the bill gives leverage to the Filipino consumers to benefit also from the Malampaya fund, which accounts for the royalty share of the State in the country’s commercial scale gas field.

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