By Delmar Carino
ELECTRIC COOPERATIVES
(ECs) have the call to invoke the Covid 19 pandemic as a force majeure in case
they were not able to fully use their contracted capacity during the period of
enhanced community quarantine (ECQ).
But the
Energy Regulatory Commission (ERC) said such option lies with the electric
cooperatives and not with the commission since force majeure is a provision in
power supply agreements (PSAs) that only the parties involved have the right to
invoke.
The ERC also
said the same goes through with any plea for any adjustment in the other fixed
costs of the generation charge as stated in the PSAs such as capital recovery
fee (CRF) and minimum energy off-take (MEOT) charge.
Force majeure
refers to unexpected and unforeseeable events. As part of a contract, they
legally excuse the parties affected from performing an obligation.
In the case
of ECs, it is up to them to decide if the pandemic is considered as a force
majeure.
The PHILRECA
Partylist and the National Association of General Managers of Electric
Cooperative (NAGMEC) earlier wrote the ERC to indorse or issue an advisory for
generation companies to consider the pandemic as a force majeure and allow the
adjustment of fees the ECs pay for their contracted capacity and other fixed
charges since many of them were unable to use such capacity at 100%.
However,
Agnes Devanadera, ERC chair and chief executive officer, said the conditions
that allow ECs to invoke force majeure are defined in the power supply
agreement and the ERC has no legal personality to come in as a party and state
that the pandemic is a force majeure.
“Whether or
not to invoke the force majeure event provision is a decision of the parties
based on the specific provision of each power supply agreement, ” the ERC chair
told Rep. Presley de Jesus of PHILRECA Partylist and Allan Laniba, NAGMEC
president.
The ERC added
that it could not also advise power suppliers to lower the capital recovery fee
(CRF) and minimum energy off take (MEOT) charged by generators on distribution
utilities since the move will be unwarranted.
“It must be
stressed that the approved CRF, whether provisional or final, were subjected to
scrutiny and evaluation by the ERC on a case to case basis after consideration
of the evidence submitted by the parties to the PSA. As such the determination
of the CRF on each and every PSA varies from one another,” the ERC said.
In similarly
denying PHILRECA and NAGMEC’s request of adjustments in the MEOT, the
commission said: “While PSAs are subject to ERC’s approval, its character as a
consensual contract does not cease. In this regard, the decision to discuss any
possible amendment to the MEOT and the contracted capacity provisions in the
PSA belongs to the parties of the contract. Hence, the initiative to adjust the
MEOT which ultimately leads to an amendment of the original PSA must come from
the parties to the PSA, subject to approval by ERC.”
Explaining
its decision, the ERC said that the ECQ did not affect all ECs similarly.
“While some
experienced decrease in demand, there are some that experienced an increase in
demand due to the fact that most of their customers are residential customers,”
it said.
The
commission said the varying effects of the ECQ across ECs make it imperative for
them to make their own careful assessment of the impact of the ECQ on their
operations taking into account the following – the situation of their distribution system, load profile, economic
profile of their franchise areas and other peculiarities that are unique to
each EC.
“A universal
advisory allowing ECs to invoke the FME provision, adjust approved CRF and
reduce the MEOT or Contracted Capacity will not address these different
situations, and hence, not applicable to all ECs nationwide,” the ERC said.
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