* This is my article in BusinessWorld last week, May 09, 2018.
Last Monday, I discussed business competition in general
and the role of the Philippine Competition Commission (PCC).
The theme will be continued in this piece and it will
discuss electricity competition in particular, especially after I was able to
interview PCC Chairman Arsenio Balisacan, the CEO of the Philippine Electricity
Market Corp. (PEMC) and Chairman of Transition Committee Oscar Ala and PEMC
Spokesperson Atty. Nino Juan.
The Electric Power Industry Reform Act (EPIRA) of 2001 or
RA 9136 has drastically liberalized the Philippines electricity sector with at
least three important provisions: (1) deregulation and demonopolization of the
power generation sector, (2) creation of the Wholesale Electricity Spot Market
(WESM), and (3) liberalization and demonopolization of electricity distribution
via Retail Competition and Open Access (RCOA).
With these and other provisions of EPIRA, the questions
to ask, among others would be:
(1) Were there many private generation companies (gencos)
that entered the market competing with each other?
(2) Were there many retail electricity suppliers (RES)
that entered the market competing with each other?
(3) Were there many players, gencos and distributors,
that use the WESM spot market competition? And more importantly, (4) Have
electricity prices for consumers gone down?
The short answer is YES to all four questions.
For gencos for instance, before EPIRA, the National Power
Corp. (Napocor) was the state-owned power generation monopoly, which also
incurred huge losses and public debts for many years.
As of April 2018, there were 113 gencos in the
Luzon-Visayas grid alone and all of them are WESM participants. Excluded are
gencos in the Mindanao grid which is not part of WESM yet. Of these 113 gencos,
five players have become more efficient and more moneyed than others, except
perhaps the government-owned Power Sector Assets and Liabilities Management
Corporation (PSALM), which still owns previous Napocor-owned power plants,
mostly hydro facilities in Mindanao and the Malaya plant in Rizal.
For retail competition, the number of contestable
customers (CCs) or those with monthly peak demand of 750 KW or higher and have
the freedom to pick their own service providers — such as electric cooperatives
(ECs) and private distribution utilities (DUs) — have increased. RCOA
implementation however, has been issued an indefinite TRO by the Supreme Court
in February 2017 and this resulted in a decline in number of CCs.
Here are the numbers for comparative electricity prices
that include two types of customers, the captive market (small consumers who
must stay with their DUs or ECs) and contestable market (they can leave their
DUs or ECs and choose their own RES).
Contestable customers are able to enjoy lower average
prices, P6.91/kWh, than captive customers that pay an average price of
P7.78/kWh.
So there you see it.
Despite the noise created by certain sectors that EPIRA
and WESM are not working, which leads them to call for a return to the old
scheme of nationalization, these data show that indeed electricity competition
is working.
It is true that Philippine electricity prices in general
remain higher than most of our neighbors in the region but that is because of
other factors like (a) many taxes especially the high VAT of 12% applied in all
parts of the electricity supply chain, from generation to transmission,
distribution and supply, even the system loss; (b) many charges in our monthly
electricity bill including universal charge, system loss charge, feed-in-tariff
(FiT) for favored renewables.
The transition of PEMC, the market operator of WESM, into
a real Independent Market Operator (IMO) as explicitly specified in EPIRA may
soon become a reality.
As a result, there will be no more government energy
agencies and bureaucracies at the PEMC Board. Good work, PEMC Transition Team.
----------------
See also:
BWorld 205, Energy mix and wishful thinking, April 30, 2018
BWorld 207, Fare control and surge cap are wrong, May 10, 2018
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