Showing posts with label renewable portfolio standard. Show all posts
Showing posts with label renewable portfolio standard. Show all posts

Monday, June 27, 2016

Energy 73, Comments to DOE draft Department Circular on RPS

The DOE asked for public comments to its proposed draft Department Circular after the public consultation last June 16.

Source: http://www.doe.gov.ph/news-events/events/announcements/2995-draft-department-circular-providing-rules-and-guidelines-governing-the-establishment-of-the-renewable-portfolio-standard-rps

Below is my letter to the NREB Secretariat and Dir., also Assistant Secretary Mario  Marasigan.
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June 21, 2016

Dear ASec Mario,

My column today in BusinessWorld is about the RPS and the public consultation last week,

Please consider that as my position  paper on the subject. Take note in particular Table 2.

PH total electricity generation in 2015 = 82.6 TWh. Of which from wind = 0.6 TWh, from solar = 0.1 TWh. So small despite FIT + priority dispatch + fiscal subsidies.

In contrast: Vietnam electricity generation in 2015 = 164.6 TWh (2x that of PH's). Of which from wind + solar = 0.2 TWh only.

Indonesia's = 234 TWh (nearly 3x that of PH's), of which from wind + solar = less than 0.1 TWh.

Malaysia's = 147.4 TWh (nearly 2x that of PH's), of which from wind + solar = 0.1 TWh only.
Our neighbors have huge existing power capacity, something that we should aspire for many years from now, and they are not gung-ho on new renewables like wind and solar. The numbers on price implication to electricity consumers should be prioritized.

My article's conclusion,

"The DoE should either implement the minimum 1% of AMI in RPS, or further delay RPS implementation until the price implications are studied and the consumers are not further burdened with higher prices and unstable electricity supply."

Thank you.

Nonoy Oplas

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Meanwhile, see this table (original table is annual data from 1990-2015, I cropped it)


Source: http://www.doe.gov.ph/doe_files/pdf/02_Energy_Statistics/power_statistics_2015_summary.pdf

New RE's share in total installed capacity rose from 0.9% (153/17,325 MW) in 2013 to 4.3% (813/18,765 MW) in 2015.

But new RE's actual contribution to electricity generation nationwide was only 0.4% (279/75,266 GWh) in 2013 and 1.5% (1,254/82,413 GWh) in 2015. Low capacity factor of new REs (about 20% average for solar, wind and biomass) is the  main reason for this. Old REs like geothermal and hydro have higher capacity factor, about 75%.

Again, new REs give us more expensive electricity and less stable, less reliable energy source. That is why government-imposed subsidies to new REs from the  pockets of electricity consumers nationwide should have short timetable, not 20 years, not even 10 years. After all, the proponents, advocates and campaigners of new REs often argue that their energy sources have "already attained grid parity" with coal and nat gas. 

If that is true, then the more that subsidies, fiscal incentives, mandatory dispatch and related provisions (like this soon RPS or  mandatory use of renewables by __% of distribution utilities' (DUs) total electricity supply to their clients and customers.) should end soon.
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See also:
Energy 66, What companies receive FIT and by how much?, May 21, 2016

Sunday, June 26, 2016

BWorld 66, Renewable portfolio standard and electricity prices

* This is my article in BusinessWorld last June 21, 2016.


The key to cheaper prices and/or good services is more competition among more players, more voluntary exchange, and not more price coercion by regulators. If buyers do not like the price of seller A, they can opt out and go to sellers B, C, and so on. Seller A is then pressured to lower his price to compete with other sellers.

The key to expensive prices and/or lousy services is more government regulation and curtailing voluntary exchange. Buyers are forced to buy from expensive sellers and opting out is not allowed. This happens in government-created monopolies like tricycle routes, electric cooperatives, or government-favored sectors like producers of new renewables like solar and wind power.

The Department of Energy (DoE) along with the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) conducted a public consultation last June 16 at Shangri-La at the Fort, Bonifacio Global City about the proposed or draft Department Circular (DC) on the Renewable Portfolio Standard (RPS). The activity was hurriedly organized and was not posted on the DoE’s Web site.

But I heard about it from a friend and then I wrote to DoE’s Mario Marasigan and asked if I could attend it and he said yes. Thank you Sir Mario.

Here is a quick backgrounder of the subject.

1. Under the Renewable Energy (RE) Act of 2008 (RA 9513), RPS is defined as a “policy that requires electricity suppliers to source an agreed portion of their energy supply from eligible RE resources.”

2. Under the Implementing Rules and Regulations (IRR), Section 4, RPS, “...Annual minimum incremental percentage of electricity sold by each RPS-mandated electricity industry participant which is required to be sourced from eligible RE Resources and which shall, in no case, be less than one percent (1%) of its annual energy demand over the next ten (10) years.”

3. Under the draft DC discussed by the DoE last June 16, Section 8. “The minimum annual increment in the RPS level shall be initially set at 2.15% to be applied to the actual total supply portfolio of the Mandated Participant in each grid for the previous year.”

4. Under the Annex table, RPS Calculation, also prepared by the DoE that day, the cumulative RE capacity that will be needed from 2016 to 2030 is a glaring 30,862 MW (30.86 GW) or an average of 2.06 GW/year increase for RE alone (see Table 1).


During the open forum, I asked about many consumers’ concern about expensive electricity. What would be the implication in pricing of the proposed RPS, if they impose a 1.5% annual marginal increment (AMI)? How about at 1.75% or at 2.15% (their proposed rate)? And if they target 30% renewables in the energy mix by 2030, or 32% or 35% (their proposed target), what would be the impact on electricity prices?

The feed in tariff (FIT) without RPS was already four centavos per kilowatt-hour (kWh) last year, 12 centavos per kWh this year, so with FIT + RPS next year, will it become 20 centavos? 25 centavos?

DoE officials answered that no study on price implications has been worked out yet and that it can come out later as the current focus is the mechanisms on how RPS will be implemented, including penalties for violators or non-implementers of RPS.

So it is a weird circular because both the DoE and the National Renewable Energy Board (NREB), the multi-stakeholder body that recommends policy options for the DoE, are pushing for a policy where they admittedly do not have a clear idea on the cost of implementation to energy consumers.

One thing that can be favorable for RPS though is that distribution utilities (DUs) will have more options from among renewable technologies -- biomass, waste to energy, geothermal, run of river hydro, impounded hydro, wind, solar, ocean, hybrid systems, others -- and choose those that are least cost.

The above RPS and RE targets by 2030 are not practical and not viable because the Philippines is still way below many of its neighbors in power generation and we need to grow fast to sustain the economic momentum of recent years and create more businesses, more jobs to more people.

People who push for higher renewables in the national energy mix want to push out coal power as much or as soon as possible. This is a day-dream and illusionary goal because of the big role that coal power contributes to many industrialized and emerging Asian economies. From 2000 to 2015, Indonesia, Malaysia and Vietnam ramped up their coal power capacity from 375% to 609%. The Philippines’ 11.4 gigawatt (GW) coal capacity in 2015 was only one-half that of Vietnam’s 22 GW, only one-third that of Taiwan’s and nearly one-eighth of South Korea’s.

For Table 2, definition of the following terms:

a. 1 terawatt (TW) = 1,000 gigawatt (GW) = 1,000,000 megawatt (MW)

b. MTOE = Million tons of oil equivalent

c. 1 MTOE = produces about 4.4 terawatt-hour (TWh) of electricity in a modern power station.




The share of wind and solar in total electricity production in the Philippines is small, only about 0.8% of the total in 2015, despite their installed power share of around 2.5%-3% of total installed capacity. The explanation for this is the low capacity factor of these new renewables.

Some people insist that there is already “grid parity” by the new renewables with coal and natural gas, that “solar is cheaper than coal” now. If this is true, then why are they asking for another round of energy coercion through high RPS, on top of existing coercions on FIT (guaranteed price for 20 years) + priority dispatch to the grid + fiscal incentives?

A developing country like the Philippines should be given more leeway in building up cheaper and stable energy sources.

Energy poverty and expensive electricity result in lack of jobs because energy-intensive industries and companies would avoid the Philippines and go to energy-stable and competitively-priced economies like Malaysia, Indonesia, Vietnam and Thailand.

The DoE should either implement the minimum 1% of AMI in RPS, or further delay RPS implementation until the price implications are studied and the consumers are not further burdened with higher prices and unstable electricity supply.

Bienvenido S. Oplas, Jr. is a Fellow of SEANET and Stratbase-ADRi, and heads a free market think tank, Minimal Government Thinkers.
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See also: 

Saturday, March 14, 2015

Energy 34: Feed in Tariff Implementation in the Philippines

* This is my guest article in No Tricks Zone yesterday.
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The Philippines enacted the Renewable Energy (RE) Act of 2008 (Republic Act 9513) that contains various subsidies to  renewables like feed-in-tariff (FIT).  

While it was signed into law in December 2008, FIT was not implemented until July 2012 because many sectors including manufacturing opposed higher price on already expensive Philippine electricity rates.  But the World Wildlife Fund (WWF), Greenpeace and other environmental groups in the country lobbied hard to implement the FIT and the Energy Regulatory Commission (ERC) was pressured to grant their lobbying, but at a lower rate as requested by the National Renewable Energy Board (NREB).

Figure 1. Proposed vs approved FIT in  the Philippines, Pesos per kWh
(Rates approved in mid-July 2012)

Prior to July 2012, there were not many renewable plants that were put up because of the uncertainty  when the FIT will be granted and implemented . After July 2012, there was certainty and more renewables were put up.

The ERC started public hearings regarding how much would be added to the monthly bill of electricity consumers in the Philippines when FIT is reflected. In August 2014, the National Transmission Corporation (Transco), the FIT administrator according to  the law, said that the forecast annual payout for renewable energy companies  based on the FIT petition would be P8.5 billion ($192.3 million) for 2015 and P10.25 billion ($231.9 million) for 2016. Wow! (Source: Philippine Star)

Last February, Manila Electric Cooperative (Meralco) and  all other electric  cooperatives and  distribution utilities in  the Philippines started collecting the introductory FIT of PHP 0.04 per kWh. If this rate is retained throughout the year, projected collection by Transco that it will distribute to the renewable firms would be PHP2.7 billion.  If the 12 percent VAT is included, this will be a P3.02 billion (US$ 68.3 million, at prevailing P44.2/$ exchange rate) leakage from the pockets of electricity consumers nationwide.

FIT rate will be adjusted and rising through time as more renewables are added to  the country’s power generation mix.

Rising  FIT has happened and  continues to  happen  in Germany, which probably has one of the world’s most elaborate renewables subsidy schemes. The FIT keeps rising as more renewables, wind and solar especially, are added yearly to the energy mix and electricity distributors are forced to buy them even when cheaper electricity from coal, natural gas, nuclear and hydro are available.

Figure 2. FIT in Germany, in Euro cents per kWh



So electricity prices in Germany keep rising. This will happen to the Philippines too, no thanks to RA 9513, the renewables cronyism law.

Figure 3. Cost paid by households in Germany, Euro cents per kWh


Source: BDEW: Germany’s Electricity Price More Than Doubles…Electrocuting Consumers And Markets, 7 December 2014.

What makes FIT a formula  for ever-rising price  of electricity?  
As contained in Section 7 of RA 9513, FIT forces the following:

(a) Priority connections to the grid for electricity generated from emerging renewables such as wind, solar, ocean, run-of-river hydropower and biomass power plants,

(b) priority purchase and transmission of, and payment for, such electricity by the grid system operators;

(c) fixed tariff to be paid to renewables producers  for 20 years; and

(d) compliance with the renewable portfolio standard (RPS).

The RPS as contained in Section 6 of the law, is the minimum percentage of generation from eligible renewable energy resources to be set by the NREB.

So combining FIT and  RPS, this  means that even if cheaper power from say Quezon coal or Sual coal,  Magat or Pantabangan hydro, Sta. Rita or Ilijan natural gas are available especially during non-peak hours, but wind power from Ilocos are available, Meralco and the various provincial electric cooperatives in Luzon grid are forced to buy from the expensive wind power plants.

While many environmental activists were among the groups that opposed electricity price hikes in the past, it is sure they will rein in their noise and militance now that their beloved renewables will be among the major  contributors to rising electricity prices in the country.  Double talk can happen anytime.

Recently, the Department of Energy (DOE) announced 14 RE projects with combined capacity of 304 MW which have been endorsed as qualified for the FIT program. The  DOE has issued certificates of endorsement (CoE) to five biomass, three small hydro, two solar and four wind power  projects.

This means that those power capacity will be dispatched to the grid at a fixed rate over a period of 20 years.

The installations for RE power totaled 750 MW:  run-of-river hydro and biomass projects at 250 MW each, wind power at 200 MW, and solar power at 50 MW, but may soon be raised to 500 MW.

Aside from  FIT and RPS, RA 9513 gives many other subsidies or relaxation of regulations and taxation to the renewable producers, privileges that are denied  to producers of conventional but cheaper power sources. These privileges include: (a) Income tax holiday for 7 years; (b) duty-free importation of RE machinery, equipment and materials within the first 10 years; (c) special realty tax rates; (d) net operating loss carry over (NOLCO) to be carried for the next 7 years; (e) 10% corporate tax rate (not 30%),; (f) tax exemption of carbon  credits; and (g) tax credit on domestic capital equipment and services.

This author is not against renewable sources per se. They are fine, along with geothermal, big hydro, coal and natural gas. What is objectionable is the cronyism and favoritism granted to the renewables  which results in an: ever rising electricity prices in the country. The case of Germany is already a guide for us. The same pattern is happening too in Spain and UK.


Government intervention and cronyism in energy policy is wrong and  counter-productive. Governments should get out of electricity pricing and stop forcing grid operators and electricity distributors to buy from renewables even if their rates are expensive. RA 9513 needs major amendments to remove the FIT and RPS schemes.
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See also:
Energy Econ 15: Electricity Angsts, Presentation at UP Diliman, March 08, 2014 
Energy Econ 26: Dealing with Power Deficit in 2015, September 19, 2014

Monday, January 26, 2015

Energy 33: Renewables Cronyism, Germany and UK Cases

Last Thursday afternoon, I gave two lectures in one class in Ateneo handled by my friend, Joey Sescon. The first is about renewables cronyism, the second about cheap oil. There were many questions and reactions on the first paper, so I presented it again in another class, also handled by Joey.


Before presenting the paper, I mentioned that I just came from Nepal. And at this month of the year, brownouts in certain parts of Kathmandu is up to 18 hours a day. The country relies heavily on hydro power and when the ice are still up  there in  the  mountains, not yet melted because it is winter, then  the  capacity of hydro power plants is very limited.

My six points outline:
1. Global energy mix
2. Generation cost, Electricity prices
3. Germany Case
4. UK Case
5. No climate basis for renewables cronyism
6. Conclusions


So despite decades of favoritism and subsidies to renewables by many governments especially in Europe, the share to total energy mix and electricity generation remains very small until this decade.


Just one major explanation: wind and solar are simply costly. Their energy density is low, their reliability and stability is low because they are intermittent. When the  wind  does not blow, when  the Sun does not show up, electricity output is zero, even on days and hours that people want electricity.


When I went to south Sweden in 2003, I landed at Copenhagen airport in Denmark, then travelled by train to Malmo, then Lund. Before the plane landed, I saw many windmills on the sea in Denmark, the offshore windmills. They looked cute.


Europe being a very modern continent, and Germany and UK being highly industrialized countries, and  yet there are stories  and reports of “EU risks blackout”, a “dark continent”, and “impossible green  dream”.



In developed Asia like Hong Kong (electricity, 71% from coal, 29% from natural gas, zero from renewables; Singapore 78% from natural gas and 18% from oil, very small from renewables (as of 2011, from ADB’’s Key Indicators 2014) ); S. Korea and  Japan, the words “blackout” or brownout” or “dark continent” are never heard. They have huge, stable and reliable energy supply, at cheap  prices, their energy policies have not been hijacked by green  socialism yet.

Monday, July 30, 2012

Energy Econ 2: Renewable Energy and High Electricity Prices

* This is my article today in the online magazine,
http://www.thelobbyist.biz/perspectives/less-gorvernment/1337-renewable-energy-and-higher-electricity-prices
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Renewable energy (RE) sources like hydro, wind and solar are good but their generation costs are generally higher than the conventional power sources. Forcing energy consumers to pay higher to make these RE companies become “competitive” is wrong.

The RE Act of 2008 (RA 9513) has created various schemes to develop some RE power sources via certain subsidy schemes, like the feed in tariff (FIT) and renewable portfolio standard (RPS).

FIT is additional charge to be passed on to energy consumers and given to RE power sources. This is an indirect tax in effect and the beneficiaries are the RE power companies who will receive the FIT. RPS is a system requiring electricity suppliers to source a certain minimum of their energy supply to come from eligible RE resources.
The Energy Regulatory Commission (ERC) has approved last July 27, 2012 the FIT rates for RE projects. These are lower than those proposed by the National Renewable Energy Board (NREB), another bureaucracy created under RA 9513. Units in Pesos per kilowatt hour.


The ERC deferred fixing the FIT for ocean power pending further study.

These schemes are another product of climate alarmism and racket that will further rob more money from energy consumers, you and me.

Even before the application of FIT system, the Philippines has the most expensive rates in the whole of Asia, higher than power rates in Japan, Korea, HK, Singapore, Taiwan, etc..


The FIT and RPS schemes will therefore make the already high power rates become even more expensive as these two schemes immediately assure the RE companies of guaranteed markets and buyers, even if current RE costs per kwh are high, and even if RE supply is unstable and unreliable. This is not fair. I have discussed earlier why the RE law is disadvantageous to energy consumers here, Energy rationing 2: The Renewable Energy (RE) law.

About two or three years ago, PDE organized a forum in UPSE about "burning planet and climate mitigation" something like that. The two speakers were the head of the Carbon Finance Solutions (CAFIS) and the chief economist of ADB, a Japanese I think.

During the open forum, I explicitly argued that the things that the CAFIS and ADB guys are saying are based on wrong premise -- that of an ever-warming, unequivocally warming world due to more CO2 emission due to more humanity's modernization. The most recent temperature data, air and tropospheric temp., land and sea surface temp., are declining or at least flat-lining despite rising CO2 concentration reaching around 390 ppm.

The CAFIS and ADB guys said that they are no scientists and they cannot comment on those things, but what they offer are means to mitigate man-made warming and climate change, adapt humanity to such climate change.

For me those were not valid responses. They cannot defend a corrupted political science by the UN (IPCC, FCCC, UNEP, etc.) masquerading as climate science, but we should nonetheless accept their proposals and programs of more climate loans, more RE loans, more carbon regulations and taxation, and so on.

I have nothing against those RE power sources per se. If people want to power their houses, offices, schools, etc. with wind or solar or biomass or other RE sources, fine, let them shoulder the full generation cost of such energy sources.

What I find objectionable is coercing us average energy consumers to pay even higher electricity prices just to subsidize the producers of RE power plants and to help “save the planet.”

I have argued before in this column that the planet is fine, it does not any savior. Climate change is true, it changes from warming to cooling and warming and cooling…. in endless, natural and multi-decadal cycles

So if climate changes naturally, with or without human intervention, what is the logic behind all those “save the planet” schemes like the RE law?
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See also:
Energy Econ 1: Coal Power, July 24, 2012
Energy rationing 1: Energy loans and climate alarmism, February 13, 2011
Energy rationing 2: The Renewable Energy (RE) law, February 18, 2011
Energy rationing 3: Restricting poor countries' access to cheap energy, April 01, 2011
Energy rationing 4: Anti-coal, anti-nuke hysteria, April 14, 2011
Energy rationing 5: Boo Chanco on the RE racket, June 02, 2011
Energy rationing 6: FEF on the RE racket, June 15, 2011