Reducing Power Rates - The U.P. Study

A research team from the faculty of the College of Engineering of the University of the Philippines took center stage yesterday in presenting, to an invited audience, the preliminary results of a 1+ year long study to analyze the structure of electric power rates. The work is being funded by an Open Grant for research from the Office of the Chancellor (whatever that might mean).

I didn’t count, but it seems like there were easily more then 150 people there, including media. I was able to attend thanks to colleagues at the UP School of Economics. It was a fairly high profile event, with opening remarks by the Chancellor, UP Diliman.

The presenters were:

  • Prof. Rowaldo Del Mundo
  • Dr. Allan Nerves
  • Prof. Edna Espos

A panel or reactors, who had been provided earlier with certain interim report results, consisted of:

  • Cyril del Callar, President NPC
  • Jesus Francisco, President Meralco
  • Lassi-Matti Holopainen, President WESM
  • Helena Tolentino, VP, PSALM
  • Generoso Senal, AVP, Transco

Notably, there were no reactors from either the ERC or the national government, both of which were subjects of the presenters opinions and conclusions.

The reactions from the panel were very interesting. The press has reported on them a little. The reactors have, or in some cases are preparing, written reactions and responses to the study. I hope those see the light of day publicly. They will be very useful and helpful. The study itself is not finalized (and to my knowledge has not been posted publicly, but I’ve seen copies of certain portions as provided to various parties). The final report is due in August.

One basic result of the study is that power rates can be reduced by about P2.00/kWh by a combination of implementing ten changes. The press has summarized those.

I was disappointed with the rigor with which the study has been undertaken. Since the study presented few, if any, issues that we all don’t already know about, the value in such an academic research project could have been the validating of the substantiality and quantification of the issues. But their access to data and information, and to some extent their approach, has hampered that.

P2/kWh applied to the Meralco sales volume is a huge number. Moving that amount money into the pockets of rate payers is a good objective. But it implicitly means it’s being moved out of the pockets of some one else. I’m not certain the UP study has evaluated either which rate payer groups see the bulk of the benefits from their recommended changes (i.e. will small users see much of a change? Does it benefit primarily the industrial sector?) or the resulting social impact of the negative changes on those that will cough up the money. Where is the transfer of wealth happening? What’s the impact outside metro-Manila? Outside Luzon?

My biggest disappointment, however, is that the study, at least with respect to generation and dispatch issues, was essentially backward looking. No work has been done to look out over the next few years to see what costs we might be expected to be incurring and how that cost outlook might be moderated by implementing specific changes.

For example, if there is indeed a sub-optimal dispatch issue with respect to the Meralco IPPs (and I have not yet been privy to any definitive analysis that substantiates that, maybe UP has that, I don’t know), then what is the quantification of that in today’s market and in the future and what specific actions should we take to insure that such optimality is achieved. Is there a regulatory action the ERC should take? Is there a market structural change that needs to be made? Is legislation required?

THAT’s the kind of stuff I’d like to see us doing in some of these forums. But that also is difficult to achieve.

But it’s way to easy to criticize. The UP research is helping to focus the discussion. And there was certainly lots of discussion from the reactors’ roundtable yesterday.

Tiwi-Makban Auction

Energy Philippines has the early story:

AP Renewables Inc., a full subsidiary of listed Abotiz Power Corporation, bagged the Tiwi-Makban geothermal complex in a bidding conducted yesterday by Power Sector Assets and Liabilities Management Corp. (PSALM) with a bid of $ 446.88 M.

It outflanked the only other bidder–First Luzon Geothermal Energy Corp. of the Lopez-controlled Energy Development Corporation which came in with a much lower bid of $ 368.44 M.

My summary of all the major asset privatizations is here.

Look at the price: $598/kW. Compare that to the other sales which range $1500/kW to $1800/kW for coal and hydro.

I’m not up to date on the condition of the assets and steam field. Maybe this price is indicative of extensive capital expenditures required to rehabilitate? Or maybe indicative of the inability of the steam fields to actually provide the full 747 MW of rated output? Or are we seeing, finally, a rationalization of asset pricing that better matches realistic expectations of future market prices?

Another Philippine Energy Blog

Dr. Joselito R Ruaya is blogging on Philippine energy issues at http://pilipinasenergy.blogspot.com/ with an area of expertise much different than my own.

I’ve missed this blog completely. I think it’s because when it’s posts come up on my radar, they are sometimes re-prints of newspaper articles - something I’m typically uninterested in since I usually find most of those directly on the internet anyway.

But I see that he’s actually posting commentary, as in today’s post on Tiwi-Makban - a subject he probably knows a little something about. I may have missed other commentary posts also. But I’m now subscribed via RSS. Maybe you should be too.

Digging on the web a little I see that he worked for 20 years at PNOC-EDC. Here is a 2006 paper he co-authored on Low Temperature Waster Water Injection Experiments at the Bac-Man Geothermal Field, Philippines. Digging further I find that he is a …

Freelance consultant on energy projects. Has a Ph.D. in science from a New Zealand University and a post-graduate diploma in energy technology from Geothermal Institute, Auckland UIniversity. Has a B.S. (Chemistry) degree from University of the Philippines.

I’m looking forward to following along with Dr. Ruaya’s experience and insights. The more bloggers in this space, the better for the Philippine energy sector (and for prices) in general.