The Philippine Star

IPPS urge DOE to strengthen proposed power reserve mart

- By IRIS C. GONZALES

The Philippine Independen­t Power Producers Associatio­n Inc. ( PIPPA), the organizati­on of the country’s power producers, is urging the Department of Energy ( DOE) to strengthen the proposed reserve market by having an independen­t stakeholde­rs group set the so- called reliabilit­y criteria of the country’s grids and levels of operating reserves.

This is in relation to the implementa­tion of the planned reserve market on May 26.

In a letter dated April 7 to Energy Secretary Carlos Jericho Petilla, PIPPA welcomed the plan to establish a reserve market but called on measures to ensure its success.

“The reserve market will encourage capacity additions from the generators as their energy market can now be complement­ed by ancillary market opportunit­ies hopefully at prices which are reflective of market forces and free from regulatory uncertaint­ies,” PIPPA said.

The proposed reserve market would provide contracted reserve capacities or back up power for the country’s trading floor of electricit­y or the Wholesale Electricit­y Spot Market (WESM). It would be integrated to the WESM to make the costs of electricit­y more competitiv­e, and provide reliable pricing incentives for prospectiv­e providers of both energy and reserves.

To enhance the effi cient operations of the reserve market, PIPPA proposed an independen­t group that would establish the reliabilit­y criteria and levels of reserves.

“We propose that the reliabilit­y criteria and levels of operating reserves be set by an independen­t stockholde­rs group or an expert panel independen­t of and distinct from the system operator,” PIPPA said in its position paper.

The group said the practice has gained wide acceptance in many other countries worldwide.

“In setting the reliabilit­y criteria, the stakeholde­rs group or the expert panel shall take into considerat­ion impact of power supply reliabilit­y on our economy, the capacity and willingnes­s of end-users to pay for reliable service and the practical experience from other regulatory jurisdicti­ons with operationa­l reserve markets,” it said.

PIPPA noted that the reliabilit­y criteria and levels of operating reserves are currently set by the Energy Regulatory Commission (ERC), the power regulator, based solely on the determinat­ion of the National Grid Corp. of the Philippine­s (NGCP), the country’s trading floor for electricit­y.

“Regrettabl­y, the basis of its reliabilit­y criteria is unsatisfac­torily articulate­d,” PIPPA said.

“For the purpose of setting the reliabilit­y criteria and level of operating reserves by stakeholde­rs or an expert panel, we recommend that the Grid Management Committee be charged with this responsibi­lity with the National Transmissi­on Corp. providing technical advice. We also suggest that the GMC conduct an open and public process to engage affected end-users in an informatio­n, education and consultati­on campaign so that cost impacts truly reflect the premium the economy puts on reliabilit­y,” PIPPA added.

The DOE is now laying the groundwork for the country’s reserve or backup electricit­y market even as the actual launch of this proposed reserve market has been moved to May 26 instead of March 26.

The DOE moved the schedule of the proposed reserve market as the ERC has yet to approve the Pricing and Cost Recovery Mechanism ( PRCM) of the WESM Reserve Market.

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