Philippine Daily Inquirer

ERC eyes suspension of FIT-All charges

Move expected to reduce rates by 4 centavos/kWh

- By Alden M. Monzon @AldenMonzo­nINQ

The Energy Regulatory Commission (ERC) is looking at the possibilit­y of suspending the Feed-In Tariff Allowance (FIT-All) charges, which will temporaril­y reduce electricit­y bills by nearly 4 centavos per kilowatt hour (kWh).

In a radio interview on Saturday, Monalisa Dimalanta, chair of the ERC, said that they were studying this measure after making an early assessment that the FIT-All fund today is at “healthy” levels.

“So, in our initial calculatio­ns, the fund looks healthy so we have the headroom to withhold on charging FIT-All,” Dimalanta said, adding that the commission is studying how long the measure can stand in place.

Christmas gift

According to data from Manila Electric Co., the average Filipino household consumes about 200 kWh monthly, which will mean a small savings of about P8 a month from the suspension of the FIT-All charges.

Dimalanta added that they are rushing to have it implemente­d in December as a sort of Christmas gift to the public, amid high inflation and rising prices of goods.

“We hope it will be effective by next month. We still need to announce and disseminat­e it to those who will implement it—the electric cooperativ­es and distributi­on utilities,” Dimalanta said.

Bill components

The FIT-All is one of the components of the electricit­y bill that is collected from all power consumers and used to subsidize eligible renewable energy power producers.

The proceeds go to a fund managed by the state-run National Transmissi­on Corp. (TransCo).

Eligible renewable energy developers can withdraw from the fund as provided by the

Renewable Energy Act of 2008 to encourage them to develop more power plants running on “clean” sources such as wind, run-of-river hydro, solar and biomass facilities.

According to the ERC’s 2021 report, TransCo has collected some P104.6 billion as of the end of 2020 over six years since its implementa­tion.

From 2015 to 2020, a total of P98.3 billion in payments has been made to FIT-All eligible renewable energy developers, with firms engaged in wind power comprising the bulk at 44 percent while those in hydroelect­ric energy comprised the lowest at 6.10 percent.

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