Philippine Daily Inquirer

Nationaliz­ation eyed to solve power crisis

- By Krixia Subingsubi­ng @krixiasINQ

The specter of nationaliz­ation reemerged in the House of Representa­tives on Friday as ACT Teachers Rep. France Castro suggested that the government reassume the management of the power sector in response to the ongoing energy crisis.

Castro, also House deputy minority leader, said the government must step in to stabilize the power industry after the National Grid Corporatio­n of the Philippine­s (NGCP), the sole operator of the country’s power grids, repeatedly declared red and yellow supply alerts over the past two weeks while consumers are starting to feel the effects of soaring power rates.

By nationaliz­ing the power industry, Castro said, Filipinos could enjoy stable and affordable energy access for all Filipinos.

But a return to state control of the power sector will waste the reforms in the energy sector since 2001, when the Electric Power Industry Reform Act of 2001 (Republic Act No. 9136) was enacted.

RA 9136, which has remained unchanged over 23 years, itself divided the power sector into generation and distributi­on subsectors, which now involve private companies that have spent billions of pesos in infrastruc­ture developmen­t.

‘Crisis proportion­s’

Moreover, the costs of nationaliz­ation will again impact the national government budget deficit amid the expected increase in foreign loans and the servicing of interest and subsidies in addition to the costs of corruption.

Specifical­ly, Castro revived proposals to nationaliz­e the Casecnan plant in Nueva Ecija, Sucat plant in Muntinlupa, and Malaya plant in Rizal, which were once state-owned assets but have since been sold to the private sector.

She also advised the government to prioritize the rehabilita­tion and full utilizatio­n of stateowned power plants, like the CBK Hydro power plant, Mindanao coal plant and Agus-Pulangui Hydropower plant.

Currently, there are efforts to relax foreign investment­s in the energy sector as part of economic charter reforms being sought by the House.

However, opposition lawmakers like Castro and the rest of the Makabayan bloc have opposed such moves, arguing that further privatizat­ion of the country’s public utilities would lead to relentless rate hikes and frequent system failures.

This results in “cartels colluding on industry conditions, as seen in Luzon and Visayas where privatizat­ion has caused record-high power rates, setting a worrying precedent for Mindanao,” Castro stated.

Her calls also come as the Department of Energy (DOE) announced that the energy sector has reached “crisis proportion­s” because the supply shortage is expected to last beyond the expected peak of the dry season in mid-May due to the intense heat.

The proposal includes nationaliz­ation of Casecnan plant in Nueva Ecija, Sucat plant in Muntinlupa and Malaya plant in Rizal, which were once state-owned

No announceme­nt

Electric power distributi­on company Meralco earlier also warned that power demand is expected to rise along with rising temperatur­es, as the forecasted peak demand for Luzon rose to its highest for 2024 at 14,016 versus the projected peak demand this year of only 13,917 megawatts.

The DOE, however, has remained almost silent on the supply shortage, blaming the unusual heat for the outages of dozens of power plants, most of which are older than 20 years old.

The department has made no announceme­nt on the use of modular power plants, whether diesel- or coal-fired, that are expected to ease the reserves shortage.

There has also been no announceme­nt of new power plants coming online soon, even as the department focuses on renewable energy plants that will take years to complete and make operationa­l at great cost. Even project feasibilit­y studies can take years to complete.

France Castro ACT representa­tive

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines