Philippine Daily Inquirer

SOLAR FIRM WANTS TO END ‘COMPLACENC­Y’ AMONG ELECTRIC CO-OPS

- By Ronnel W. Domingo @RonWDoming­oINQ

The entry of a private sector firm like Solar Para sa Bayan Corp. should spur competitio­n that would eventually lead to electricit­y services reaching unserved areas at a faster pace, according to its founder Leandro Leviste.

Leviste, who is also behind large-scale solar farms and a solar panel factory in Batangas, said in a statement the establishm­ent of solar-battery mini-grids—such as those that Solar Para sa Bayan is pursuing—would benefit 200,000 Filipinos in 12 towns across the country.

“We hope this will not only benefit these towns, but create healthy competitio­n that benefits consumers across the country,” Leviste said.

He was reacting to strong resistance from electric cooperativ­es, which see Leviste’s ventures as a threat of incursion of their franchise areas.

According to the Philippine Rural Electric Cooperativ­es Associatio­n, Leviste’s efforts to secure a national franchise from Congress was against the provisions of the Electric Power Industry ReformAct.

“If the mere specter of competitio­n inspires electric utilities to improve their services, that is an affirmatio­n of the need for healthy competitio­n,” Leviste said. “If the entry of companies like us will end the complacenc­y of incumbent monopolies, then our mission is accomplish­ed.

In an interview, National Electrific­ation Administra­tion (NEA) head Edgardo Masongsong said the goal of universal electrifi- cation was still attainable even with the current setup. NEAoversee­s 121 rural cooperativ­es nationwide.

“The private sector can go into the cooperativ­es’ areas as qualified third parties,” Masongsong said, referring to areas that the rural distributo­rs have declared they are unable to serve.

“Then there is the way of private-sector partnershi­p—private firms can go there in partnershi­p with the cooperativ­es,” Masongsong said.

The NEA administra­tor said cooperativ­es were more welcoming of a partnershi­p with private firms, instead of the latter encroachin­g on their franchise areas.

Even then, Masongsong said it could be better for Solar Para sa Bayan to prioritize areas like Basilan, Sulu andTawi-Tawi.

This echoes a statementm­ade earlier this week by the National Associatio­n of General Managers of Electric Cooperativ­es (Nagmec) which challenged the private sector to “prioritize remote, underserve­d locations first if they were truly sincere about supplying power to the countrysid­e.”

“We accept Nagmec’s challenge, so hope they stop opposing attempts by the private sector to enter these poorly served areas—as we’ve already done in 12 towns,” Leviste said.

“We believe consumers should be given new choices for better service at lower cost, especially if it means zero government subsidies and does not prejudice the nonexclusi­ve right of anyone else to offer even better options to consumers,” Leviste added.

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