MANILA, Philippines – The Supreme Court on Monday, December 23, issued a 60-day temporary restraining order (TRO) on the P4.15-per-kilowatt-hour power rate hike of the Manila Electric Co. (Meralco).
Meralco was set to implement the increase this month, following a December 9 approval by the Energy Regulatory Commission. But two groups led by leftist lawmakers asked the High Court last week to stop the rate hike; Meralco and the ERC, as well as the Department of Energy, are respondents in the case.
The High Court said the TRO takes effect immediately.
On December 19, lawmakers from the Makabayan bloc in the House of Representatives sought a TRO against the record-high price hike of Meralco, citing "transcendental public interest."
On December 20, representatives of the National Association of Electricity Consumers (Nasecore), the Federation fo Village Association (FOVA), and the Federation of Las Piñas Homeowners Association also sought the Court's intervention, saying the P4.15-per-killowatt-hour (kWh) December increase went against public interest.
The High Tribunal ordered both petitions consolidated. It scheduled oral arguments on the issue on January 21.
Meralco earlier said the increase resulted from the shutdown of the Malampaya gas field and outages of power plants where Meralco sources its power requirements from. Meralco said it was forced to source power from plants that uses diesel, which is more expensive than natural gas.
The petitioners told the Court, however, that ERC's approval came without the benefit of a notice or hearing involving the public, who are to bear the brunt of the increase. This amounted to "lack or excess of jurisdiction."
Several quarters questioned the shutting down of the plants simultaneously as they said a possible collusion happened, sabotaging market competition.
By January 2014, the Department of Justice's Office for Competition – ordered by Justice Secretary de Lima to conduct a probe into the matter – will file a report outlining recommendations resulting from its investigation. A review of existing energy laws or a passage of a new one may be recommended, said De Lima.
Victory for consumersSenators hailed the decision.
"It's a good Christmas gift of the Supreme Court to the people. Nice way to start the year!," Deputy Minority Leader Vicente Sotto III said in text message to reporters.
Senator Antonio Trillanes IV said that the TRO is a "victory for the consumers" that should be sustained. "We should sustain the pressure so the freeze would be permanent. In the meantime, we shall find ways to avert future spikes in power rates," Trillanes said.
Last week, Trillanes proposed a bill that seeks to allow the government to use the Malampaya fund to subsidize power costs in case of a market failure and for the repair and rehabilitation of transmission towers and energy-related equipment during calamities.
The senator is seeking President Aquino's certification of the proposed measure as urgent so it can save consumers from temporary payment of higher electricity bills.
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Rappler.comMeralco open to refund customers after TROMANILA, Philippines – Manila Electric Co. (Meralco) on Monday said it is open to giving refunds to its customers who have already paid their December electricity bills following the issuance of a temporary restraining order (TRO) on the implementation of the power rate hike.
Meralco president Oscar Reyes said the power distributor is willing to comply if they are mandated by court to issue a refund.
"If they have already paid, if we are mandated to refund, we can easily refund," Reyes said, noting that around 70 percent of its 5.3 million customers have already been sent their billings.
"We will have to follow whatever the SC says. Hopefully it will be resolved before the next billing cycle," he added.
Reyes said they have yet to receive a copy of the Supreme Court decision, which halted the implementation of the P4.15 per kilowatt hour (kWh) power rate increase for 60 days.
Three groups of customers will be affected by the high court’s decision, according to Meralco senior vice president Al Panlilio.
"Those who have been billed and have paid, those who have been billed and have not been paid, and those who are of a different billing cycle and have not been billed," he said.
Reyes, meanwhile, said Meralco has asked the Energy Regulatory Commission (ERC) to defer the P6 billion payment to the Wholesale Electricity Spot Market after the regulator issued an order deferring the imposition on further generation adjustment for January.
"We have filed with ERC our manifestation, as we are being effectively ordered to defer, what is an automatic pass through," Reyes said.
He warned that "the last thing you want to do is to do something that interrupts the delivery of electricity service."
"If one part of the supply chain can't function or unable to continue paying on its bills, that will have repercussions on the entire supply chain," he said.
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ABS-CBNnews.com