710 likes | 965 Views
OUTLINE OF PRESENTATION. Power Sector ReformsNew Power Sector StructurePrivatizationOpen Access
E N D
2. OUTLINE OF PRESENTATION Power Sector Reforms
New Power Sector Structure
Privatization
Open Access & Retail Competition
Other Power Sector Reforms
Power Supply-Demand Profile (National, Luzon, Visayas, Mindanao)
NPC Financial Status
Update on the Oil Industry
Energy Independence Agenda
Energy Mix
5-Point Plan
Legislative Agenda
TransCo Franchise Bill
Natural Gas Bill
Renewable Energy Bill
LPG Bill
Conclusion
5. R.A. 9136 took effect on June 26, 2001
Provides for the:
Privatization of the National Power Corporation (“NPC”)
Creation of Transmission Company (“TRANSCO”)
Creation of Power Sector Asset and Liabilities Management Corporation (“PSALM”)
Creation of Wholesale Electricity Spot Market (“WESM”)
Creation of Energy Regulatory Commission (“ERC”)
Establishment of Open Access for competitive consumers
7. Privatization by concession
25 year lease, renewable for 25 years
Finance, operate, expand, maintain and manage facilities
Attractive to investors if franchise transfers to Concessionaire
PSALM to secure congressional franchise after selecting Concessionaire
Purchase consideration to include deferred payments
Performance-Based Rate Methodology promulgated by ERC in May 2003 (first PBR in the region)
9. Approval of unbundled transmission and distribution wheeling charges
Initial implementation of cross subsidy removal scheme
Establishment of wholesale electricity spot market (WESM)
Privatization of at least 70% of total capacity of generating assets of NPC in Luzon and Visayas
Transfer of management and control of at least 70% percent of total energy output of power plants under contract with NPC to IPP Administrators (IPPAs)
10. Generation and transmission functions of NPC already unbundled
Need to complete the unbundling of electricity rates to identify and separate charges relating to generation, transmission, distribution and supply
76% of rate unbundling cases filed with ERC by DUs resolved as of June 2004
Loan condonation for all 119 electric cooperatives (P18 Bn)
11. EPIRA requires only the initial removal of cross subsidies in order to implement open access
For NPC, this involves removal of inter-grid (e.g., between Luzon, Visayas Grids) and intra-grid (e.g., within the Luzon Grid) subsidies
For DUs, this involves removal of inter-class subsidies (e.g., between industrial and residential classes).
Initial year of intra-grid cross subsidy removal (equivalent to one-third of the cross subsidy) began Sept. 2003
12. Constitution of the Phil. Electricity Market Corp. Board in Nov. 03
Demo WESM inaugurated in Dec 03
Contract for MMS software awarded last Feb. 2004
Price-Determination Methodology (PDM) for pricing of electricity traded in the WESM, approved in principle by ERC in March 2004
Constitution of AGMO by Sept. 04
Market trials for bidding of electricity to commence in June 05
Target commercial operation by Jan. 06
13. 70% NPC Luzon & Visayas capacity to be privatized by end-2005
Three gencos already privatized:
3.5 MW Talomo HEP
1.6 MW Agusan HEP
1.8 MW Barit HEP
Precedents to accelerated privatization of NPC assets:
Expedite NG absorption of NPC debt to secure consent of creditors for asset and debt transfer
Transfer of NPC assets to PSALM /TRANSCO
Transfer of NPC debts to PSALM
Negotiate Transitional Power Supply Contracts (TSCs) with DUs
Secure franchise for Transco privatization
14. Transfer to IPP Administrators (IPPAs) to be effected on or shortly before an operational WESM (Jan 2006)
Ongoing review of implementation details by PSALM
15. Electric Cooperative Enhancement
Systems Loss national average from 15.63% in 2002 reduced to 15.08% in 2003
Aklan showed the biggest improvement with almost 8% reduction in systems loss
Masbate marked 6.30% improvement
Rule of thumb: 1% reduction in systems loss ? P 360 Mn savings to the electric cooperatives
P/GMA Challenge to further reduce SL to a single digit national average before 2010
Participation of private sector through Investment Management Contracts (IMC)
Management Academy for ECs
16. IPP Contracts reviewed and renegotiated resulting in US$1.03 billion savings in NPV terms
18. MERALCO 1,316,329
Davao Light 77,268
Dagupan Electric 29,289
Cagayan Electric 28,440
Cabanatuan Electric 17,431
Iligan Light 16,418
Panay Electric 14,754
Cotabato Light 3,783
TOTAL 1,503,691
31. Tariff adjustment
NPC debt absorption by NG
Ensure successful privatization of TransCo & Genco assets
Ensure privatization and management of NPC IPPs
Provide competitive power rates
Introduction of time-of-use tariff
Elimination of cross-subsidy between industrial and residential users
36. Market: 374 players engaged in different downstream activities
Liquid Fuel Bulk Marketing 54
Liquid Fuel Retail Marketing 286
LPG Bulk Marketing 11
Terminalling 3
Bunkering 20
Total demand: 0.317 million barrels/day or 0.36% of the world oil demand
Supply: current inventory recorded at 14,481 MB (or 50 days supply)
Prevailing Domestic Prices In Metro Manila:
Unleaded Gasoline P25.35 – P26.38 / liter
Kerosene P20.14 – P21.58 / liter
Diesel P19.90 – P20.75 / liter
LPG (11kg) P331 – 369
38. Energy self-sufficiency level which increased from 45.5% in 2001 to 50.9% in 2002 will continue to be above 50% in 2003. This will be the result of the projected increase in natural gas production from 11.2 MMBFOE in 2002 to 26.3MMBFOE in 2003Energy self-sufficiency level which increased from 45.5% in 2001 to 50.9% in 2002 will continue to be above 50% in 2003. This will be the result of the projected increase in natural gas production from 11.2 MMBFOE in 2002 to 26.3MMBFOE in 2003
40. In 2003, the 3 biggest users of oil are:
Transport sector, which consumed 58.01 MMBFOE
Industrial sector, which consumed 12.09 MMBFOE or 14% of total oil consumption
Residential sector, which consumed 7.05 MMBFOE or 8% of total oil consumption
Among the 3, the biggest user is the transport sector accounting for 68% of total oil consumptionIn 2003, the 3 biggest users of oil are:
Transport sector, which consumed 58.01 MMBFOE
Industrial sector, which consumed 12.09 MMBFOE or 14% of total oil consumption
Residential sector, which consumed 7.05 MMBFOE or 8% of total oil consumption
Among the 3, the biggest user is the transport sector accounting for 68% of total oil consumption
41. The increase in fuel taxation will be significantly felt by the more affluent sector of the society (private car owners belong to the middle to upper income class) than the low income group.
Impact:
A family that logs 10,000 kms per year (based on GTZ estimate of average distance traveled for cars, I.e., 10,000 kms) at an average of 16 kms/liter (based on the results of fuel economy run) will have to spend around P1,250 per annum if gas prices go up by P2 due to increase in fuel tax. However, if conservation and efficiency measures are employed by car owners, this additional expense may be avoided. The P1,250 additional expense translates to 45 kms of distance traveled (using gasoline pump price of P27.73 which already includes the P2 tax increase). This means that if one reduces the distance traveled by at least 45 kilometers in a given year (maybe by planning one’s trips), the P2 increase in fuel taxation would not be felt.
The increase in fuel taxation will be significantly felt by the more affluent sector of the society (private car owners belong to the middle to upper income class) than the low income group.
Impact:
A family that logs 10,000 kms per year (based on GTZ estimate of average distance traveled for cars, I.e., 10,000 kms) at an average of 16 kms/liter (based on the results of fuel economy run) will have to spend around P1,250 per annum if gas prices go up by P2 due to increase in fuel tax. However, if conservation and efficiency measures are employed by car owners, this additional expense may be avoided. The P1,250 additional expense translates to 45 kms of distance traveled (using gasoline pump price of P27.73 which already includes the P2 tax increase). This means that if one reduces the distance traveled by at least 45 kilometers in a given year (maybe by planning one’s trips), the P2 increase in fuel taxation would not be felt.
42. Chapter IV Section 14 of Republic Act 8479, otherwise known as the Downstream Oil Industry Deregulation Act of 1998, mandates the DOE to monitor and publish daily international crude oil prices, as well as follow the movements of domestic oil prices.
The latest ERB-approved APM (Automatic Pricing Mechanism), uses Dubai crude oil as reference, being the crude oil benchmark in Asia and the nearest type of crude which yields similar percentage of products compared to our local demand.
Historical figures show that Dubai crude oil peaks during periods of conflicts in the Middle East, highest at $31.52/bbl during the Gulf crisis in 1990. However, in October last year, similar peak was reached at $30.52/bbl when OPEC cartel cut their production and forged a supply management agreement to keep price of crude oil within the band of 22-28 US $/bbl. Today, OPEC targets a narrower price band of $24-26/bbl, again to protect their supply within the manageable level.Chapter IV Section 14 of Republic Act 8479, otherwise known as the Downstream Oil Industry Deregulation Act of 1998, mandates the DOE to monitor and publish daily international crude oil prices, as well as follow the movements of domestic oil prices.
The latest ERB-approved APM (Automatic Pricing Mechanism), uses Dubai crude oil as reference, being the crude oil benchmark in Asia and the nearest type of crude which yields similar percentage of products compared to our local demand.
Historical figures show that Dubai crude oil peaks during periods of conflicts in the Middle East, highest at $31.52/bbl during the Gulf crisis in 1990. However, in October last year, similar peak was reached at $30.52/bbl when OPEC cartel cut their production and forged a supply management agreement to keep price of crude oil within the band of 22-28 US $/bbl. Today, OPEC targets a narrower price band of $24-26/bbl, again to protect their supply within the manageable level.
43. International oil prices hit all-time high
Steep demand in China and India due to increased economic activities
Decreasing spare production and refining capacity
Speculative trading activities rather than supply and demand fundamentals
Terror alerts in the US
Unresolved tax problems between Yukos and the Russian government
Sabotage on Iraqi pipelines
Government has no control over the international oil price surge
Price rather than a supply problem
Government has no resources to subsidize oil prices
47. Regulated environment :
Only three companies in operation; All are refiners
Practically all supplies were locally sourced, with refinery utilization reaching more than 85%
Thermal power plants (Sucat, Malaya, Tegen) were in full operation hence the higher demand for bunker fuel
Demand mix similar to hydroskimming yield of Dubai which is a heavy crude
Government Subsidy (OPSF) to stabilize prices
Guaranteed return of 6-10% Deregulated Environment:
Entry of new players; All direct importers
Clean Air Act requires importations of higher qualify fuels the quality of which local refiners cannot meet
Decrease in the demand for bunker fuel, following decommissioning of thermal plants which modified the demand mix to favor importation of lighter crude
No OPSF, No subsidy
Power of Choice for consumers
No guaranteed return
53. Deregulation considered as a success in view of:
Increased players in the market providing better competition
Increased new investments in bulk & retail businesses
Better ancillary services
Wider access of petroleum products outside Metro Manila
Enhanced consumers power of choice
LPG safety standards need further strengthening through legislative measures
To give more teeth to implement sanctions to violators
To establish safety standards for consumer protection
55. Energy self-sufficiency level which increased from 45.5% in 2001 to 50.9% in 2002 will continue to be above 50% in 2003. This will be the result of the projected increase in natural gas production from 11.2 MMBFOE in 2002 to 26.3MMBFOE in 2003Energy self-sufficiency level which increased from 45.5% in 2001 to 50.9% in 2002 will continue to be above 50% in 2003. This will be the result of the projected increase in natural gas production from 11.2 MMBFOE in 2002 to 26.3MMBFOE in 2003
56. Energy self-sufficiency level which increased from 45.5% in 2001 to 50.9% in 2002 will continue to be above 50% in 2003. This will be the result of the projected increase in natural gas production from 11.2 MMBFOE in 2002 to 26.3MMBFOE in 2003Energy self-sufficiency level which increased from 45.5% in 2001 to 50.9% in 2002 will continue to be above 50% in 2003. This will be the result of the projected increase in natural gas production from 11.2 MMBFOE in 2002 to 26.3MMBFOE in 2003
57. Increase reserves of indigenous oil and gas
Aggressively develop renewable energy potential such as biomass, solar, wind and ocean resources
Increase the use of alternative fuels
Form strategic alliances with other countries
Strengthen & enhance energy efficiency and conservation programs
58. Intensive promotion of oil & gas exploration
PCR-1 launched in August 2003 offering 46 contract areas
2 blocks bidded by BHP Billiton, Amerada Hess & Occidental Petroleum
PCR-2 to be launched in 2005
More investments expected to be generated if Supreme Court reconsiders Mining Act ruling
59. Strengthen Philippine National Oil Company to take the lead in the development of indigenous energy sources
PNOC Energy Development Corp. (PNOC-EDC) to increase geothermal capacity and become a geothermal world leader
PNOC Exploration Corporation (PNOC-EC) to be strengthened to increase new oil & gas discoveries
PNOC Petrochemical Dev’t. Corp. to play a key role in the development of the petrochem industry
PNOC Shipping & Transport Corp. to modernize fleet thru strategic alliances with the private sector to bring fuel to demand centers
60. To be the world’s leader in geothermal energy
Active promotion of geothermal exploration through Geothermal Bid Round
10 prospective geo sites with 300 – 510 MW potential capacity
Bidding extended to November 2004
4 Japanese, 1 American firms interested to bid
61. To be the largest wind power producer in SEA
Launched the first ever wind investment kit for 16 wind power areas with 345 MW potential capacity in June ‘04
Groundbreaking of Northwind’s 25MW Wind power project in Bangui, Ilocos Norte in April ‘04
Inaugurated the first commercial 1.1 MW wind-diesel hybrid project in Batanes in Aug. ‘04
62. Infrastructure development
BatMan 1 & spur lines by 2007
LNG Terminal by 2008
Power Sector
Conversion of existing and decommissioned power plants
Construction of greenfield power plants
Transport Sector
Commercial operation of CNG buses
CNG buses to start plying major routes of Manila to Laguna by 1Q ‘05
Local bus operators to sign purchase contracts for 140 units of CNG buses from China by Sept. ‘04
Establish Mother-Daughter station by 1Q ‘05
Industrial
Introduction of combined heat & power systems by 2007
63. Acceleration of the Coco Bio-Diesel Program
Memo Circular 55 to utilize coco-based diesel on government vehicles signed in Feb. ‘04
Program officially launched in April ‘04
Commercial utilization in July ‘04
Development of Ethanol as gasoline blend
Cooperation with Thailand
One major oil company willing to support
Support from the Dept. of Agriculture & Sugar Planters Association of the Phils. crucial
64. Cooperation with Thailand for possible use of Subic as regional storage facility
Joint development efforts on upstream exploration with neighboring countries
Russia as a new oil supplier
Australia, China and Indonesia as primary coal suppliers
65. DOE to push for mandatory implementation of nationwide energy efficiency & conservation program
CNG for transport buses
Biofuels as mandatory fuel blends
Expand scope of energy labeling to other appliances, vehicles, electrical devices & equipment
Shift to energy efficient lighting in residential, commercial & industrial establishments
66. National Energy Efficiency and Conservation Program to be launched on 25 August 2004
To help mitigate impact of rising oil prices
To reduce expenditures on fuel and power
To contribute to environment protection program
Fuel Efficiency & Conservation Program
Voluntary Agreements (e.g., anti-idling campaign, carpooling, carless days)
Partnership with leading fast food chains, ecozones, industries, companies
Energy Labeling & Efficiency Standards (e.g., fuel efficiency rating labels in auto dealers showroom)
Energy Audits & Demand Side Management
Mandatory reduction of fuel consumptions among government agencies
68. Legislative measures critical to the country’s thrust of energy independence
TransCo Franchise Bill
Enhancement of value of transmission assets to potential concessionaires
Natural Gas Bill
Promotion of nat gas as a secure, stable and clean source of energy
Promotion of competition by liberalizing entry and fair trade measures
Renewable Energy Bill
Promotion of RE resources through the provision of incentives
Preferential treatment in terms of interconnection, dispatch
LPG Bill
Provision of more stringent safety standards
Provision of stringent penalty / sanctions to violators
Alternative Fuels Utilization Bill
Promotion of wider utilization of alternative fuels