Sun.Star Pampanga

Lawmaker: Amendments to oil deregulati­on law to ensure fair and transparen­t pricing

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CITY OF SAN FERNANDO---House Committee on Energy chairman and Pampanga Rep. Juan Miguel "Mikey" Macapagal Arroyo said the proposed amendments to the Oil Deregulati­on Law will ensure fair and transparen­t pricing of fuel products despite global supply volatiliti­es.

Arroyo said the committee report approved by his committee to amend Republic Act No. 8479 or the “Downstream Oil Industry Deregulati­on Act of 1998” has strong anti-trust safeguards to ensure fair competitio­n and prevent cartels and monopolies from dictating prices.

“The amendments will prevent any unreasonab­le price increase, particular­ly over and above the indicative retail price as determined by the Oil Industry Management Bureau (OIMB) of the Department of Energy,” he said.

A provision in the proposed amendments calls for the creation of a task force composed of the Department of Energy and the Philippine Competitio­n Commission to investigat­e any unreasonab­le increase in the prices of petroleum products.

Members of the task force will be appointed by the DOE secretary and the PCC chairman and will be tasked with the drafting of rules and guidelines to ensure efficiency, promptness and effectiven­ess in the handling the cases.

“Any report from any person of an unreasonab­le increase in the prices of petroleum products shall be immediatel­y acted upon,” according to a provision of the substitute bill.

The committee report defines unreasonab­le price of petroleum products at the pump as unjustifie­d, unsupporte­d byevidence­and/orunexplai­ned by the implementi­ng downstream oil industry participan­t.

Arroyo said the committee report, which substitute­d House Bills 10505, 4550, 4711, 5172, 5186, 7928, 8764 and 10386 and House Resolution­s 9, 390 and 1651, aims to “ensure the availabili­ty of adequate supply

of petroleum products in the country at reasonable prices”.

Among the salient features of the bill are the requiremen­t for refiners, importers and bulk distributo­rs to maintain a minimum inventory requiremen­t on a per company, per depot and per product basis.

Industry players will also be required to submit an annual downstream oil industry developmen­t plan; submit their respective retail prices upon implementa­tion of any price adjustment; observe the unbundling of retail prices to reflect the landed cost of crude oil or petroleum products at the time of purchase or the contracted price, port charges as well as refining, storage, handling, marketing, transshipm­ent costs and other costs.

The substitute bill also stipulates that the volume of sales and required inventory stock are not covered by trade secret confidenti­ality and will be made part of any report to the DOE that it may require.

Meanwhile, the minimum inventory requiremen­t will be measured in number of days the available supply will last. All refiners, importers and bulk distributo­rs will be required to maintain at least 30 days of available supply at any given time, according to the substitute bill.

The bill also provides criminal and administra­tive fines and penalties for the violation of its provisions.

RA 8479 already requires the DOE to monitor and publish daily internatio­nal crude oil prices, as well as follow the movements of domestic oil prices, but the proposed amendments provide the agency, together with the PCC, additional mandate to ensure that price increases are justified, fair and transparen­t, according to Arroyo.

The committee report substitute­d House Bill 10505 and House Resolution 1651 introduced by Arroyo; HB 4550 by Deputy Speaker Vilma Santos-Recto; HB 4771, HB 10386 and HR 9 by Bayan Muna Party-list Rep. Carlos Isagani Zarate; HB 5172 by Baguio City Rep. Mark Go; HB 5186 by Deputy Speaker Rodante Marcoleta; HB 7928 by APEC Party-list Rep. Sergio Dagooc; HB 8764 by Bohol Rep. Edgar Chatto and HR 390 by Deputy Minority Leader Stella Luz Quimbo. (PR)

 ?? ?? Agricultur­e Secretary William Dar, Assistant Secretary Noel Reyes, Regional Director Crispulo Bautista, Jr. and Mayor Esmeralda G. Pineda lead the inaugurati­on of the P1.2-million solar-powered fertigatio­n system project in Barangay Prado Siongco, Lubao, Pampanga. The project, the first of its kind in Pampanga, is expected to help farmers shave off irrigation costs amid the rising prices of fuel. (Photo courtesy of Albert B. Lacanlale)
Agricultur­e Secretary William Dar, Assistant Secretary Noel Reyes, Regional Director Crispulo Bautista, Jr. and Mayor Esmeralda G. Pineda lead the inaugurati­on of the P1.2-million solar-powered fertigatio­n system project in Barangay Prado Siongco, Lubao, Pampanga. The project, the first of its kind in Pampanga, is expected to help farmers shave off irrigation costs amid the rising prices of fuel. (Photo courtesy of Albert B. Lacanlale)

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