The Philippine Star

Meralco targets lower system loss by year-end

- By DANESSA RIVERA

Manila Electric Co. (Meralco) is targeting to reduce its system loss by year-end as it banks on increased economic activity and intensifie­d drive against illegal connection­s.

Meralco senior vice president and head of networks Ronnie Aperocho said the power distributo­r is seeing some improvemen­t in its system loss numbers as more commercial and industrial customers start operating despite the pandemic.

The company has also resumed addressing illegal connection­s, which contribute­d to the improving system loss level.

System loss refers to unbilled power caused by pilferage and physical loss of energy when electricit­y passes through distributi­on lines.

“With the shares of commercial and industrial customers in our total sales mix improving with our saturation drives against illegal connection­s getting back to business as usual and unbilled volumes being reduced significan­tly, we are seeing improving improvemen­ts in our system loss numbers starting April and onwards and looking forward to a much lower system loss by year-end, lower than our year-end system loss figures in 2020,” Aperocho said.

As of end-2020, Meralco’s system loss is at 6.08 percent, which is 0.54 percentage point higher than 5.54 percent at end-2019 due to unbilled sales and the shift in sales mix toward higher loss-to-serve residentia­l segment. It was way below the system loss cap at seven percent for privately-owned distributi­on utilities set by the Energy Regulatory Commission (ERC) that year.

Meralco’s average system loss rose further in March to 6.14 percent, which is 0.72 percentage point higher than the 5.42 percent recorded in the same period last year.

While the system loss increased, it is still below the system loss cap at 6.5 percent for privately-owned distributi­on utilities set by the ERC starting this year.

Aperocho said the increase was primarily due to the huge shift of consumptio­n to the residentia­l segment, which increased from 30 percent pre-pandemic to 38-40 percent share during the pandemic.

“The residentia­l segment is served from secondary lines which have higher loss-to-serve compared to the

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