Manila Bulletin

Meralco rates up in Jan. billing

By ₱0.2744 per kwh

- By MYRNA M. VELASCO

Customers of Manila Electric Company (Meralco) will need to pay additional ₱0.2744 per kilowatt hour (kwh) in their electric bills this month, as the overall tariff of the utility firm had increased to ₱8.7497 per kwh this January from last month’s ₱8.4753 per kwh.

For typical residentia­l customers in the 200-kwh usage threshold, they will brace for an aggregate upward adjustment of ₱55 in their forthcomin­g bills.

The utility firm indicated that the tariff hike should have been heftier if not for the mitigated adjustment­s ordered by the Energy Regulatory Commission (ERC) on the overrecove­ries and under-recoveries of Meralco.

The regulatory body in particular ordered a refund of Meralco’s overrecove­ries for three months; while the collection of under-recoveries had been stretched within two years or 24 months, hence, that will result in a net refund to Meralco customers of ₱0.1150 per kwh in the current billing cycle.

Despite the higher rate this month, Meralco noted that its allinclusi­ve tariff for January is still ₱0.70 per kwh lower compared to the ₱9.4523 per kwh passed on in the same month last year.

For the January 2021 generation charge, Meralco reported that this climbed by ₱0.3058 per kwh to ₱4.4574 versus the December level of ₱4.1516 per kwh. On the whole, this is still leaner than last year’s January generation charge of ₱4.9039 per kwh.

Conversely, the transmissi­on charge component of the rate had been reduced by ₱0.0236 per kwh, “due to the refund of transmissi­on over-recoveries,” while taxes and other charges posted a net decline of ₱0.0078 per kwh, amid the passon of increased FIT-All subsidy for renewable energy (RE) capacities.

On supply procuremen­t, Meralco’s exposure in the Wholesale Electricit­y Spot Market (WESM) in the last supply month hovered at 6.3 percent; while securing the bulk of 56.4 percent from its power supply agreements (PSAs); and the balance of 37.3 percent from its contracted independen­t power producers.

The charges of its PSAs had so far jacked up by ₱0.2723 per kwh; and the IPP-procured capacities were also higher by ₱0.2428 per kwh. Supply sourced from the spot market had also been down by ₱0.6135 per kwh.

The increase in the generation charge had been primarily attributed to the 252 megawatts downtrend in demand in December, just reaching 9,634 MW from a higher level of 9,886MW in the prior month, because of cooler temperatur­es and the series of non-working holidays.

Meralco similarly indicated that electricit­y demand within its franchise area dipped to its lowest since the lifting of the stricter phase of lockdown or the enhanced community quarantine (ECQ) which started easing since May.

“Lower demand led to fixed costs from power suppliers being spread over lower energy volume, resulting in higher effective generation rates to consumers,” the utility firm explained.

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