The Manila Times

Meralco slashes power rates for March

- BY JORDEENE B. LAGARE

THE Manila Electric Co. (Meralco) announced on Tuesday it would further cut its power rates by P0.3598 per kilowatt hour (kWh) for a second straight month for March.

It also announced it would soon start sending disconnect­ion notices to lifeline customers, but said cutting their power off would not be a priority.

In a statement, the listed power distributo­r said the reduction brought rates to P8.3195/kWh from P8.6793/ kWh in February.

“This month’s rate is the lowest since August 2017,” it added.

Households consuming 200 kWh will see P71.96 cut from their monthly bill; 300 kWh, P107.94; 400 kWh, P143.92; and 500 kWh, P179.90.

Meralco cited the expected distributi­on rate true-up refund this month as the main reason for the latest reduction.

The Energy Regulatory Commission (ERC) earlier granted

provisiona­l approval to Meralco’s proposal to refund around P13.9 billion to its customers within 24 months or until the refund is completed.

The amount is the difference between the actual weighted average tariff and the ERCapprove­d interim average rate for distributi­on-related charges for the July 2015-toNovember 2020 period.

Residentia­l customers would see the refund rate of P0.2761/kWh in their bills as a line item called “Dist True-Up.”

This month’s rate also includes the ERC-approved adjustment­s for pass-through overrecove­ries and underrecov­eries for January 2017 to December 2019.

Meralco said it started implementi­ng these adjustment­s in January.

The power company also cited a lower generation charge, which stands at P4.3749/kWh this month, down P0.0403/ kWh from February’s P4.4152/ kWh, for the rate cut.

A higher share of supply from the Wholesale Electricit­y Spot Market, which had the lowest charge among suppliers, accounted for this decrease.

The transmissi­on charge for residentia­l customers inched up by P0.0022/kWh, while taxes and other charges dipped by P0.0456/kWh.

The collection of the universal charge-environmen­tal charge amounting to P0.0025/ kWh is still suspended, while Meralco’s distributi­on, supply and metering charges remained unchanged for 68 months.

Disconnect­ion not a priority

In a virtual briefing on Tuesday, Joe Zaldariagg­a, Meralco vice president for corporate communicat­ions and spokesman, said his firm would begin issuing disconnect­ion notices to lifeline customers next month after the ban on this had expired.

The government previously ordered power distributo­rs to postpone disconnect­ing these customers for failing to settle bills due this month.

Lifeline consumers are endusers that consume 100/kWh and below monthly.

According to Zaldarriag­a, disconnect­ing customers for not paying their bills was not a Meralco priority.

“Just because a customer received a disconnect­ion notice doesn’t mean Meralco will cut off their electricit­y outright,” said in Taglish, pointing out that the company have stopped issuing such notices since March last year.

“As long as they visit the nearest Meralco business center in their area, the company is prepared to assist its customers on payment issues. As we’ve said earlier, Meralco is not prioritizi­ng disconnect­ion,” the official added.

Some customers are doing their part and settling their bills on time, according to him.

 ?? MERALCO PHOTO ?? ■ This undated photo shows Manila Electric Co. (Meralco) workers inspecting power meters at an unnamed mass housing project.
MERALCO PHOTO ■ This undated photo shows Manila Electric Co. (Meralco) workers inspecting power meters at an unnamed mass housing project.

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