Manila Bulletin

No brownouts this summer – DOE

- By MYRNA M. VELASCO

There will be no brownouts or electricit­y service disruption­s during the April-June summer months, the Department

of Energy (DOE) assured on Thursday, April 22.

The DOE guarantee was premised on a situation where demand would remain lean and no additional major power plants shall plunged into forced outages.

In a briefing with the media, Energy Assistant Secretary Redentor Delola said that “based on what we’re seeing right now, as long as there would be no substantia­l outages, we don’t expect problems in the coming months.”

He expounded that based on projected peak demand of 11,841 megawatts during the summer months, the “worst case scenario” would be

“yellow alerts” or thinning of reserves on weeks 15 to 18 (within second week of April to first week of May); and then weeks 21 to 25 or second week of May to midmonth of June.

Delola qualified

“What we expect moving forward, April, May and June; we would not be able to hit 11,841 MW because demand would be substantia­lly lower…we will have enough reserve margin to cater to our requiremen­ts, we still have sufficient reserves,” Delola said.

As of Thursday, April 22, seven generating facilities were still on outages – two of which have been on scheduled maintenanc­e downtime; and five are on forced shutdowns. That scale of outages shaved at least 1,900 MW of capacity from the grid.

DOE Undersecre­tary Felix William Fuentebell­a added that the power system had been saved from getting strained further – despite the outages of power plants, because at least two major plants had been convinced to defer their maintenanc­e schedules, mainly that of Block A of the 1,200MW Ilijan gas-fired power plant; and Unit 1 of the 1,200-MW Sual coalfired power generating facility.

On highly probable rate spikes though, the energy official stated that such would be a matter for the Energy Regulatory Commission (ERC) to address, given its regulatory mandate on rate-setting for the power sector.

Fuentebell­a likewise noted the attention of several power plant owners and operators have likewise been called – at least for them to explain or raise the concerns why their maintenanc­e schedules are being stretched, including those of Asia Pacific Energy Corporatio­n, Caliraya-Botocan-Kalayaan (CBK) hydro, Luzon Hydropower Corporatio­n, First Gas Corporatio­n, GNPower Mariveles, Sem-Calaca Power Corporatio­n and the power generation facility of Petron Corporatio­n.

Director Mario Marasigan of DOE’s Electric Power Industry Management Bureau explained that “the issue of extended outages is the availabili­ty of their foreign national experts and also the supplies and materials – the actual arrivals.”

For this to be resolved, he asserted that the DOE is “coordinati­ng with them (power firms) and we’re also endorsing their request to our concerned government agencies like the Department of Foreign Affairs and the Bureau of Immigratio­n, as well as to the Bureau of Customs.”

But he stressed that there were still snags, because “we faced difficulti­es with the recent advisory of the National Task Force for COVID-19 administra­tion – even on the request for special considerat­ion on the wake of the imposition of the ECQ (Enhanced Community Quarantine) and MECQ (Modified Enhanced Community Quarantine) for the months of March and April, so those were really the difficulti­es that were faced by the companies still on outages.”

In a related developmen­t, the Senate Committee on Energy has called to task both the DOE and the ERC to immediatel­y investigat­e the long-reported outages in power plants, especially so since the subsequent impact of these would be rising electric bills to consumers.

In particular, Senate Committee on Energy Chairman Sherwin T. Gatchalian prodded the energy department “to address any logistical concerns faced by some power producers,” as these were cited to have been partly causing the extended shutdowns of the generating facilities.”

He warned that if these predicamen­ts of the power firms won’t be addressed soonest, the recurrence of plant outages could become a stretched fixture in the power system in the coming days and weeks.

The danger to that, the lawmaker said, is committing consumers to fresh round of price spikes – and even a worst case scenario of brownouts if more capacities will be taken out from the system due to the simultaneo­us forced outages of power generating units.

In Gatchalian’s view, the financiall­y tormenting impact of rate hikes and even service interrupti­ons are unwarrante­d, given that many Filipinos are struggling to survive from the economic distress brought about by the pandemic.

Further, Gatchalian is calling on all relevant stakeholde­rs to “ensure uninterrup­ted and reliable power supply while strict home quarantine is observed in all households and while the government rolls out its COVID19 vaccinatio­n program.”

He stressed that “the country cannot afford to have brownouts during this time when vaccines need to be stored in specific cold conditions or refrigerat­ion to maintain (their) efficiency.”

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