Philreca supports Beneco GM; PCOO exec still wants position
>> Sunday, August 9, 2020
BAGUIO CITY – More government officials threw their support to Melchor Licoben, newly appointed general
manager of Benguet Electric Cooperative after Marie Banaag, Assistant Secretary
of the Presidential Communications Operations Office (PCOO) reportedly wrote
President Duterte to endorse or appoint her as Beneco manager.
The Philippine Rural Electric Cooperatives
Association (Philreca), a congressional partylist and umbrella organization of
the country’s electric cooperatives, passed a resolution on July 17 strongly
supporting the appointment of Licoben as full time general manager of
Beneco.
Esteban A. Somngi, Beneco president said the Beneco
board of directors were in full support of Licoben whom they appointed May 21
as GM.
The National Electrification Administration has yet
to affirm Licoben’s appointment but despite this, his appointment by the Beneco
board of directors is legal and binding, said Somngi, a lawyer.
He said the board made another resolution urging
the NEA, as government power regulating agency, to affirm Licoben’s appointment
as GM.
There is no timeline for the NEA affirmation, he
said, but Licoben can hold office as OIC general manager pending this.
Of concern was the appointment of a new general
manager of the Abra Electric Company reportedly by President Duterte.
The new Abreco GM recently went to the Abreco
office in Bangued informing them he was the new GM on authority of Duterte
shocking employees.
Somngi however said Abreco was “ailing” (in terms
of finances and management) so its case was different.
“In the case of Beneco, its finances and management
are working well and we even have one the lowest electricity rates in the
country,” he said.
All municipal governments of Benguet and Baguio
City, through resolutions, aired their support to Licoben, Somngi told a press
conference here Thursday at the Beneco office in South Drive.
The intention of Banaag to sit as Beneco general
manager has raised alarm among member-consumers and employees of Beneco who
said Licoben was more than qualified to hold the post basing from NEA
regulations.
Memorandum No. 2017-035 of the NEA stipulates 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.
Licoben, who sat as Beneco OIC general manager for
more than six months, is an electrical
engineer while Banaag is a lawyer.
Somngi said Licoben should manage Beneco as GM
since he has the qualification, expertise and experience.
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 served Beneco close
to 30 years already.
Meanwhile, Liza
Agoot, Baguio bureau chief of the Philippine News Agency said Banaag “was not
commenting on her application as Beneco general manager and “will just let the
process take its course.”
Banaag reportedly said “It’s (her application as
GM) out of my hands.”
The PNA is under the PCOO. Banaag was former mayor of Natonin, Mountain
Province
With Licoben’s leadership, Beneco is now expecting
a surge in power demand as Baguio City and Benguet under “new normal.”
He told the press conference SM, the giant mall
here had a normal monthly electricity rate of P12 million but this went down to
P2 million per month since the Covid-19 pandemic struck.
“We expect power consumption to rise,” Licoben
said.
Beneco is ready to hurdle all regulatory and industry demands for
distribution utilities in the next few years, Licoben said.
He added Beneco was accepting 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 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, during Thursday’s press conference, said
Beneco is studying to set up a cooperative radio station and an electric
cooperative bank.
He added the electric company plans to do other
money generating projects.
Masongsong earlier encouraged ECs to seriously consider two options saying
it is high time ECs must diversify their business to survive and gain the
loyalty of their consumers.
Licoben earlier 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, adding Beneco
was also bullish on internet or online business.
“We have tweaked our strategies to adapt to 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 Beneco is completing regulatory
requirements for its proposed one megawatt solar facility in Tabaan Sur, Tuba,
the first among Beneco’s solar projects.
Licoben said plans were being set to ensure steady
supply of electricity with less unscheduled power interruption to address
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 140 barangays in Benguet. – Alfred Dizon and Delmar Carino
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