Kidapawan City in North Cotabato Province is one
of the worst hit by Mindanao’s power crisis with at least eight hours to 10
hours of daily power curtailment in the first quarter of the year.
Small and medium traders in North Cotabato expressed dismay over
the eight-hour daily rotating brownout like the case of auto repair shop
operator Gregorio Tuburan.
Tuburan said, almost half of the day is wasted, as they are
dependent on electricity. The situation has resulted in the decrease of his
income due to low productivity.
During cut-off times, business establishments, government
offices and other commercial buildings use generators.
At nights supermarkets also rely on generators. Vendors pool
their money to purchase mini-generators to continue trade inside a dark
supermarket.
But those who cannot afford to buy generators have survived only
with the use of battery trucks, chargeable LED lights, and candles and even
improvised oil lamps.
Feeling the suffering of the people from the power curtailments,
Kidapawan City officials have demanded the Department of Energy to appropriate
energy share from the total generated energy.
Energy Act of 1992 states that energy-generating facilities in
the country like the Mt. Apo geothermal plants is obliged to allocate 25
percent of the total daily output to the host town and provinces.
But this demand has not been granted yet, resulting in the
filing of civil suit against energy
officials and power operators.
During the height of power shortage, Cotelco has only 15.4
megawatts of daily load dispatch from the Napocor.
Cotelco needs a regular 32 to 36
megawatts power load to continue a stable operation.
At the moment, Mindanao Grid has a shortage of 400 megawatts of
power supply.
But several officials and progressive groups have claimed there
is no actual power crisis in Mindanao.
According
to them, power cartel sectors that privatized the
industry are behind the “artificial” power crisis to compel local cooperatives
in buying power from much more expensive power barges.
On the second week of May, Cotelco
has managed to buy an additional 8 megawatts of power supply from the private
power barge supplier, Therma Marine Incorporated (TMI) to augment power
shortages in North Cotabato.
Cotelco now can maintain 28 up to 30
megawatts of power load which is now expecting fewer hours of brownouts.
Purchase of power load from diesel fuel-powered
power barges like TMI is three times of the price from that coming from
hydro-power generated energy, this would mean an increase in charges to power
consumers.
End.
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