The Philippine Star

COA to DOE: Where are the e-trikes?

- By ELIZABETH MARCELO

With one year left before the scheduled completion of its P21.672-billion electronic tricycles (e-trikes) project, the Department of Energy (DOE) has yet to distribute even a single unit of the vehicles to its intended beneficiar­ies, according to the Commission on Audit (COA).

In an annual audit report recently published on its website, the COA stated that as of Dec. 31, 2016, only P77,791,419.85 or 0.35 percent of the total project cost of P21.672 billion ($504 million) has been disbursed.

Of this disbursed amount, only P14,398,023.17 was allocated for project implementa­tion activities, while P63,393,396.68 was for the payment of commitment charges and interests incurred due to the project’s delayed implementa­tion.

The COA noted that on Sept. 27, 2013, the government, through the Department of Finance (DOF), signed two loan agreements and a grant agreement with the Asian Developmen­t Bank (ADB) for the implementa­tion of the “Market Transforma­tion through Introducti­on of Energy Efficient Electric Vehicles (E-Trikes) Project.”

The project includes delivery of 100,000 e-trike units to selected local government units (LGUs) to replace the internal combustion engine (ICE) tricycles; creation of a lithiumion battery supply chain by creating an initial substantia­l market; establishm­ent of pilot off-grid and grid-connected charging stations; and collection and proper disposal of the replaced tricycles and used batteries.

Under the agreement, the project’s implementa­tion took effect on Jan. 1, 2013 and is scheduled to be completed on Dec. 31, 2017.

The COA said that the DOE, as the executing agency, was supposed to sign memoranda of agreement (MOAs) with the Land Bank of the Philippine­s to finance the payment of the e-trikes that will be procured from the contracted suppliers, as well as with the LGUs for the e-trikes’ distributi­on to their local tricycle drivers.

“However, the MOAs have not been signed as of Dec. 31, 2016,” the COA said.

The audit body further noted that despite the absence of the MOAs, the DOE bid out and awarded the contract for the supply of 3,000 e-trike units to Uzushio Electric Co., Ltd. on Feb. 15, 2016.

Under the agreement, 1,200 e-trike units shall be delivered within three months after the contract signing; the remaining 1,800 units, within three months thereafter.

“As of yearend, however, no e-trike has been delivered,” the COA said.

The COA said that with the continued delay in the utilizatio­n of the ADB loans, the government has already incurred a total of P87,486,821.16 commitment charges and management fees “as a result of non-delivery of the expected outputs.”

“It should be emphasized that the E-Trikes Project has not delivered a single e-trike unit to its intended beneficiar­ies after four years from its effectivit­y and with only one year remaining before the scheduled project completion,” the COA report read.

“With less than a year remaining for DOE to implement the project, and considerin­g the complexiti­es and challenges that the project has gone through, we are concerned that the expected project outputs would not be delivered and consequent­ly, the project objectives would not be attained,” it added.

The COA said the sustainabi­lity of the project is now “in jeopardy” as the cost per unit of the e-trikes has already increased from around P250,000 to currently around P455,000.

The COA pointed out that this would be “very costly for the local tricycle drivers who will be required to pay the same over a period of five years.”

The COA recommende­d that the DOE hasten the implementa­tion of the project; otherwise, revisit its feasibilit­y “and if necessary, recommend the cancellati­on of the loans as soon as practicabl­e to avoid further incurrence of commitment fees and other financial charges.”

In its reply letter, the DOE management informed the COA that the National Economic and Developmen­t Authority Investment Coordinati­on Committee (NEDA-ICC) has approved the DOE’s request for the cancellati­on of at least $359.76 million worth of ADB loans for the ETrike Project.

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