Electric coops hit granting of franchise to Sen Legarda son
>> Sunday, December 9, 2018
By Ramon
Dacawi
A bill seeking to grant to the son of Senator Loren Legarda
a franchise to operate “Solar Para Sa Bayan” has sent jitters among electric
cooperatives in the country who believe such move would undermine their
viability as power distributors.
Worried over the debilitating impact of
such move, the Philippine rural Electric Cooperatives Association, Inc.
(Philreca) came up with a signature campaign opposing the move to grant Leandro
Leviste the franchise.
“We say no to preferential treatment, we say no to
underhanded maneuvers in the renewable energy and rural electrification
sector”, the Philreca said in a statement.
Responding, general manager Gerardo
Verzosa of the Benguet Electric Cooperative said, “Our position is that should
Solar Para Sa Bayan or a qualified third party offer cheaper rates of
electricity, then by all means the electric cooperatives must not be repugnant
(to the proposal).
“The electric cooperatives must not deny
their consumers the opportunity to avail of cheaper power should there be one
available. This is why the ECs must also up the ante of their performance so
that they could compete with Solar Para Sa Bayan or any Department of
Energy-authorized QTP.”
Such bill should spur electric
cooperatives to improve their over-all service and make them competitive in
terms of management, services and charges to ensure patronage by consumes.
In a response to columnist Boo Chanco who discussed the
impact of the bill to electric cooperatives, Verzosa said “Beneco is proud to
announce that among the country’s electric cooperatives, it has remained
steadfast in its bid to provided cheap electricity and efficient service to the
member-consumers even to far-flung sitios”.
Despite operating on a mountainous
terrain, Beneco has registered generation costs and average residential rates
per kilowatthour comparable to that of Meralco.
For 2016, Beneco’s average generation
cost was P3.3304 compared to P3.9438 for Meralco. Beneco’s average residential
rate per KWH runs between P7.1292 to P8.0883 compared to Meralco’s P8.4995 to
P10.2707.
Beneco’s performance is reflected in
its having garnered seven awards, the most by ane electric
cooperative, during the last national convention.
Among the citations was the cooperative’s
having pulled down its systems loss to 8.07 percent, translated to savings
amounting to millions of pesos.
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