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ECs press revisit of NGCP law

January 19, 2022 People's Tonight 296 views

AN alliance of electric cooperatives in the country yesterday underscored the imperatives of taking another look at the laws governing the power industry with a view to efficiently addressing present day challenges as manifested by the recent massive outages brought about by typhoon Odette that swept southern Philippines last Dec. 12.

The storm’s overall damage caused serious setbacks on the social and economic lives of the people residing at the hard-hit regions.

The Philippine Rural Electric Cooperatives Association Inc. (Philreca) referred in particular to Republic Act (RA) 9511 which created the privately owned National Grid Corporation of the Philippines (NGCP) and RA 9136 also known as the Electric Power Industry Reform Act (EPIRA).

“I strongly urged my colleagues in Congress to revisit these two landmark laws that arguably fell short in the delivery of reliable, affordable, and sustainable power supply as envisioned by
the authors,” said Philreca president and party list legislator Presley De Jesus.

“The sad reality is power interruptions seem to be a way of life for the people in several regions of the country. And to add insult to injury, they are being unjustifiably charged excessive rates for below par service,” De Jesus stressed.

The Philreca leader cited as a case in point the protracted blackouts that gripped the entire provinces of Bohol, Leyte, and Samar, as well as parts of Cebu where communication and power distribution lines were downed by super typhoon, resulting in black Holiday Season for the affected residents.

De Jesus was mulling the reversion of NGCP to state ownership, management, and control.

Philreca held this notion as meaningful in light of the dismal power situation in the country.

“The idea behind privatizing the transmission assets of the government then was to have a better, more reliable, and more secure power supply, but regrettably, every time we have strong typhoons, the NGCP seems to be groping in the dark. Hence, I strongly believe it would have been better had the government maintained control of these transmission facilities,” De Jesus said.

Meantime, he suggested that the national government participates in limited power generation to augment the energy supply requirements during exigencies.

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