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Group Calls for a More Consumer-involved Energy Industry

A consumer organization during its launch today (Feb. 17)  expressed alarm over what it perceives as an energy crisis in the country, aggravated by the lack of consumer empathy and participation in the energy industry.

“The  Philippines  remains  to  charge  one  of  the  highest  electricity  costs  in  Asia.  This  and  the continued  poor  services  especially  during  the  current  pandemic  are  affecting  the  ordinary Filipino’s capacity to cope. Many are also losing their jobs,” said Nic Satur, National Coordinator for Kuryente.Org.   “We in Kuryente.Org thus believe that transparency and accessibility in the energy industry will help consumers be educated about a more transparent and socially inclusive energy program.”

In attending the virtual launch, Senator Sherwin Gatchalian, chair of the Senate Committee on Energy, underscored how important it is for consumers to be educated and involved in issues that affect the lives of the majority of Filipinos. He said that consumer protection is ensured and competitive operation of the electricity industry is enhanced through the Senate Bill No. 173 or the “Energy Advocate Act”. Gatchalian has authored several laws on consumer protection and energy,  among  them  are  the  Electric  Cooperatives  Emergency  and  Resiliency  Fund  Act,  the Energy Virtual One Stop Shop Act, the Energy Efficiency and Conservation Act, the Rice Trade Liberalization Act, and the Mobile Number Portability Act.

“The rationale for the Energy Advocate Act is to give organizations a bigger voice in terms of rates setting  and  going into  the  approval of  retail  rates  here  in  our  country,” he  said.  “The  Energy Advocate  Act  created  the  Energy  Advocate  Office  under  the  Department  of  Justice.  Thus,  it becomes the lawyer of consumer groups and the representative of all end-users in energy sector matters.”

Senator Gatchalian also mentioned that even though almost everyone in this planet consumes and  pays  for  electricity,  more  often  than  not,  they  do  not  know  how  the  payment  and computation for this is being derived. This, according to him, is where consumer advocacy groups such as Kuryente.Org must come together to make noise and study the complexity of the energy industry to protect the rights of the consumers.

Energy  Regulatory  Commission  (ERC)  Legal  Service  Director  Atty.  Maria  Corazon  Gines  also shared  the  functions  and  compositions  of  ERC,  as  well  as  its  adopted  COVID-19  response measures to better serve and help the energy consumers during these trying times.

“The protection of public interest as it is affected by the rates and services of electric utilities and other providers of electric power is paramount in the discharge of ERC’s functions. We will always keep the consumers in mind when we evaluate and decide on all our applications,” Atty. Gines said.

On  the  hand,  Mr.  Josell  Co,  Assistant  Manager  for  Knowledge  Management  Services  of  the Independent  Electricity  Market  Operator  of  the  Philippines,  explained  the  essence  of  the Wholesale Electricity Spot Market as it is where industries trade electricity and where distributors conduct power supply agreements with generation companies for their electricity requirements and agreed rates.

“Electricity is a very unique commodity in a sense that it has to be generated when it is needed. Unlike other commodities like meat and sugar that we could actually store and consume when we need it, electricity is needed 24/7 but cannot be economically stored in very large quantities,” he explained. “Here in IEMOP, we aim to make electricity needs as competitive and as beneficial as possible to be able to serve the consumers better.”

It has been almost a year since the lockdown was imposed in the country due to the rising cases of COVID-19. Rappler reported that the Philippines is at its worst economic slump since World War II, with its gross domestic product falling by 9.5 percent in 2020.  Amid the economic strain, consumers are also burdened by exorbitant fees imposed by energy suppliers. A research study made by Kuryente.Org, entitled, ‘Electrifying a Nation: The Philippine Energy Sector in Focus’, reveals an overbilling through the averaging scheme was committed against consumers during the peak of the community quarantine. The  said averaging computation was based on higher generation rates and not the lower rates during the lockdown period.

The business community is also seeking better service, lower prices, and more options. Small and medium-scale enterprises decry the lack of long-term solutions to combat the economic strain brought by the prolonged community quarantine.

“Businesses are losing a lot to the pandemic and we need long-term solutions to the problems we are facing. The government should help us access infrastructure that will allow us to choose where  to  get  our  electricity  from.  We hope that  our  voices will  be  heard  and  represented  in decision-making processes in the energy industry, since these policies affect us directly,” says entrepreneur Mark Dennis Uyaco.

These consumer stories are the very reason why Kuryente.Org has been established – to ensure that the government, the energy industry, and the consumers are in an open conversation to future-proof the economy.

 

“Our study shows that, historically, only a few rich families are controlling the energy industry, and we would like to change that by strengthening consumer empowerment and representation. We want to reclaim the power back to the Filipino consumers,” says Satur.

As a consumer welfare organization, Kuryente.Org is calling on the government to:

  1. Allow substantial  consumer  representation  in  the  ERC  as an  ex-officio observer  in  the commission en banc;
  2. Develop a comprehensive roadmap for migration from coal to cleaner, more efficient, and much cheaper renewable energy sources;
  3. Have a public review and accounting of universal charges, system loss, FIT All charge, and other subsidies as pass-on charges to consumers; and
  4. Implement an  immediate  lifting  of  the  TRO  on  RCOA  and  gradual  lowering  of  the

threshold.

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Written by dotdailydose

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