By Dexter A. See
BANGUED, Abra – The
Abra Electric Coop. (ABRECO) was able to avert a total power blackout
provincewide after it paid P9.7 million in arrears and surcharges to the
Aboitiz Power Renewables, Inc. (APRI) late Tuesday afternoon but power outages
in the province are still likely to happen once the rural electric cooperative
was not able to settle its current power bills with their independent power
supplier, an ABRECO official said here.
Richard Tuzon, ABRECO
institutional services department manager, said top ABRECO and APRI officials
are undergoing negotiations to come out with a reasonable agreement on time for
the cooperative to settle its monthly power bills with the supplier considering
the serious damages sustained by the power distributor during the onslaught of
Typhoons Luis and Mario last September.
“We just want
understanding and consideration from APRI. We are not running away from our
obligations but we just want APRI to give us more time to collect from our
consumers and pay them our monthly billings,” Tuzon stressed.
He said APRI
management should understand that ABRECO relies on its monthly collection from
its over 40,000 consumers in order to settle its generation charges to APRI as
the same is contained in the power bills, thus, the need for them to be given
enough time to collect from the consumers before paying the power supplier.
Under the current set
up, APRI imposes to ABRECO the amount and date that it should pay its current
power bills which the rural electric cooperative is contesting because it is
not sure that the consumers will be able to settle their power bills in the
prescribed dates of the month.
Tuzon said ABRECO is
proposing that it will pay its current power generation bills to APRI at least
during the end of the month or the first week of the succeeding month to allow
the cooperative to collect the power bills from its consumers and that the
surcharges must not yet be imposed for transparency and accountability
purposes.
He assured consumers
that ABRECO was able to fully settle its accumulated arrears and surcharges
with its power supplier, thus, the only contentious issue undergoing
negotiations is the lead time to be given by AP|RI to the cooperative to settle
its current bill without the imposition of the mandatory surcharges.
Gov. Eustaquio Bersamin
encouraged both contending parties, ABRECO and APRI, to come out with a reasonable
agreement on the matter so that the people of Abra will not be again grouping
in the dark on what to do once there will be prolonged power outages as a
result of disagreements on when the cooperative will pay its current power
bills with APRI.
“Abra is always in the
limelight of bad publicity due to the series of killings and now power outages.
We also want good publicity for our people,” Bersamin said.
Bersamin expressed his
gratitude to Energy Secretary Jerico Petilia for his timely intervention that
resulted to the avertion of the supposed power outage that might have occurred
in the province last Monday as a result of the failure of ABRECO to settle its
remaining arrears with its power supplier.
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