By Delmar Carino and
Alfred Dizon
BAGUIO CITY – All
municipal governments of Benguet and Baguio City, through resolutions, aired
their support to Melchor Licoben the newly appointed general manager of the
Benguet Electric Cooperative (Beneco).
This, after a
top official of the Presidential Communications Operations Office wrote a
letter to President Duterte urging him to recommend or appoint the PCOO executive
to sit as Beneco general manager, sources said.
This has
raised alarm among member-consumers and employees of Beneco who said Licoben
was more than qualified to hold the post even basing from regulations of the
National Electrification Administration (NEA).
Memorandum
No. 2017-035 of the NEA stipulates that an applicant as general manager of an
electric company must have held the post as OIC (officer in charge) for at
least six months and must have a bachelor’s degree in engineering from
accredited schools like universities as electrical, mechanical, electronics or
communications.
They asked
the Northern Philippine Times not to name the PCOO official in the meantime so
the executive would do some soul-searching and not pursue plans of heading the
Beneco, considering that it needs to be led by somebody with the qualification,
expertise and experience like Licoben particularly during these uncertain times
of Covid-19 pandemic when the cooperative needs to be run efficiently.
Licoben, an
electrical engineer, was appointed by the Beneco’s board of directors May 21 as
general manager.
The
Philippine Rural Electric Cooperatives Association (PHILRECA|), the umbrella
organization of the country’s ECs, also passed a resolution on July 17 strongly
supporting the appointment of Licoben as full time general manager of Beneco.
Earlier, the
Baguio Correspondents and Broadcasters Club (BCBC), the largest media
organization in the Cordillera, also passed a resolution throwing its support
to the 52 year old GM who has served the Beneco close to 30 years already.
With
Licoben’s leadership, Beneco is now expecting a surge in power demand as Baguio
City and Benguet slowly crawls to the new normal.
Beneco is
ready to marshal all its resources to hurdle all regulatory and industry
demands for distribution utilities in the next few years.
Licoben
accepted on Tuesday the challenge hurled by the NEA for all the country’s 121
electric cooperatives (ECs) to piggyback on the national government’s thrust to
let local economies absorb the influx of idled employees from the
metropolis.
Edgardo
Masongsong, NEA administrator, keynoted the on line NEA-EC Strategic Thinking
Conference from July 21-23 and said that the role of ECs have become more
prominent today when the attention of national growth shifts to rural
development.
“The mandate
for ECs now must range from sitio energization to rural development and
consumer empowerment,” he said.
Licoben,
whose appointment by the EC’s board of directors, said Beneco is studying the EC’s possible put
up of a cooperative radio station and an electric cooperative bank.
Masongsong
earlier encouraged the ECs to seriously consider the two options since, he
said, it is high time the ECs must diversify their business to be able to survive
and gain the loyalty of their consumers.
Licoben said
he will bring the proposals to the board for consideration. “We are about to
finish our mini hydro project in Buguias and we are ready to explore other
alternatives,” he said.
“We have
tweaked our strategies to adopt to the change of times. We have finished our
business continuity plan to respond to the adverse impact of the pandemic and
certainly, the NEA recommendations are well within our radar,” he said.
Licoben added
that the EC is also in the thick of completing the regulatory requirements for
its proposed one megawatt solar facility in Tabaan Sur, Tuba, the first among Beneco’s
solar projects that are in the pipeline.
Licoben said
plans are afoot for ensuring the steady supply of electricity with less
unscheduled power interruption to address the growing demand for power owing to
the government’s Balik Beneco power rates for July were supposedly much lower
compared to those of giant Manila Electric Co.’s (Meralco).
Based on
comparative data on the power rates of the electric cooperative and the power
distribution utility, Beneco’s residential power rate for July was pegged at
P7.99 per kilowatthour (kWh) compared to Meralco’s announced rate of P8.966 per
kWh.
In June,
Beneco’s residential power rate was P7.76 per kWh compared to the P8.72 per kWh
of Meralco, the biggest power distribution utility in the country.
Local power
industry sources said despite presence of numerous non-viable areas within the
cooperative’s franchise area being provided with cheap and quality power
through the facilities of the electric cooperative, Beneco was still able to
offer cheap power rates to its 170,000 member-consumer-owners.
For over a
decade now, it was able to maintain its status as one of the Class AAA electric
cooperatives that continues to have one of the cheapest power rates among the
121 rural electric cooperatives and a number of power distribution utilities
operating in different parts of the country.
Its
aggressive implementation of the government’s rural electrification program has
resulted in the 100 percent energization of Baguio City’s 128 barangay
(villages) and the 140 barangays in Benguet.
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