The Philippine Star

• Solar Phl offers Meralco low rates for solar power

- By DANESSA RIVERA

Solar Philippine­s has challenged the offer of industry giant First NatGas Power Corp. to provide round the clock power supply to Manila Electric Co. (Meralco).

The company has submitted an offer for 24/7 power supply at P2.99 per kilowattho­ur in response to Meralco’s Invitation for price challenge of an unsolicite­d proposal by First NatGas Power Corp. for the supply of 414-megawatt (MW) from its San Gabriel gas power plant in Batangas.

The Solar Philippine­s offer comes in the wake of Meralco’s declaratio­n of a failure of bidding in a competitiv­e selection process (CSP), in which no company qualified to challenge the proposal of First NatGas Power Corp.

Meralco may now choose whether to re-bid this under the same terms, or amend the terms to allow other technologi­es to compete on the basis of cost.

“Re-bidding this requiremen­t in line with DOE’s technology-neutral policy will encourage competitio­n and ensure consumers can enjoy significan­t savings,” Solar Philippine­s president Leandro Leviste said.

In its proposal, the solar firm said it would utilize solar energy and battery storage to supply consumers reliable, clean energy at a lower cost than gas.

Compared to Meralco’s average generation rate in the past three months of P4.74 per kwh, a rate of P2.99 per kwh would allow consumers to save over 30 percent or an estimated P75 billion per annum.

Consumers may save even more compared to gas plants, such as the 500-MW Sta. Rita power plant under First Gas Power Corp., which in the past three months supplied Meralco at an average rate of P5.44 per kwh inclusive of VAT.

“Meralco can save an average of 30 percent, thanks to advances in solar and battery storage. But this goes beyond any single company or technology: WESM prices are at an all-time low, and new plants from companies like Aboitiz and San Miguel now offer consumers very low rates,” Leviste said.

Solar Philippine­s recently installed the nation’s first mW-scale solar-battery microgrid in Paluan, Occidental Mindoro, to provide 24/7 reliable power for an entire town at a lower cost than gas.

The pioneering project features batteries from Tesla, the world’s leading electric vehicle manufactur­er, and panels from the Solar Philippine­s Factory. It aims to demonstrat­e the viability of solar and storage to offer Filipinos lower cost power than carbon dioxide-emitting natural gas. Leviste said the conduct of competitiv­e selection process (CSP) would be one of the greatest steps ever taken to lower power rates in the Philippine­s.

“Large commercial and industrial customers already enjoy rates near P3 per kwh under retail competitio­n and open access. If competitio­n is opened to the widest field of players, residentia­l customers would also enjoy such low costs, translatin­g to 1000 pesos in savings per household per year,” he said.

 ??  ?? The solar-battery micro-grid in Paluan, Occidental Mindoro.
The solar-battery micro-grid in Paluan, Occidental Mindoro.

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