Power outage looms; ‘Abra pols want Abreco execs out’
>> Monday, January 7, 2013
BANGUED, Abra - A “power struggle” in this
province’s lone electric power firm is ongoing spawned by outside forces in
Abra including political figures wanting control of the cooperative.
Abra Electric Cooperative (Abreco) general manager
Loreto Seares, Jr., bared this but said they will “weather the dirty politics “
even as another black-out is impending at the start the year even if power
bills to Aboitiz Renewable Power Inc. (APRI)
the firm that supplies power to Abreco was already paid.
“Abreco is asserting our perseverance in
weathering all (their) obstructionist posturing and doomsday prophecies,” said
Seares, Jr. “We refuse to be sidetracked from our vision and mission as a
public utility organization exclusively mandated by law to deliver electric
power supply to the whole Abra franchise area,”
Seares said 2013 "ushers in a new
beginning of the cooperative”.
A supposed black-out on unpaid obligations to
APRI on Dec. 27 was averted after Abreco paid its monthly dues of P4.9 million.
“We inform our member-consumers that our
electric cooperative is capable of paying its monthly electricity fees. We have
successfully done that. We have no debts, whatsoever, at APRI, as of this
date.”
Seares said, “brownouts are not a horrifying
specter that would shake the foundation of our cooperative.”
Abreco is braving yet another threat of power
cut off on Jan. 3, this time by the National Grid Corporation of the
Philippines and next by the Power Sector Assets and Liabilities Management Corp.,
both reportedly being pressured by local Abra political leaders wanting to use
the cooperative’s financial woes to oust the Abreco management.
“We do not subscribe to such low-handed
tactics. The common good is paramount,” Seares said.
“Electric power is a basic commodity which
cannot be bastardized as a bargaining chip in a political game. The general
welfare clause takes precedence over all our thrusts, programs, and plans in
Abreco.”
Abreco services at least 47,000 Abrenios in
all 27 towns of Abra.
As long as we are free from political
intervention and adventurism, Abreco keeps its lights on, Seares added.
“If our power supplier has been unwittingly
dragged into this as the alleged source of the misrepresented facts, we have to
inform them so within the context of our business intercourse.”
Abra Gov. Eustaquio Bersamin has denied
charges “of his dipping fingers into the affairs of Abreco” and reportedly
wants his own “anointed one” to replace Seares ahead of the 2013 midterm polls.
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