Showing posts with label Ernest Leung. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ernest Leung. Show all posts

Sunday, October 9, 2011

Biz Buzz: The ‘Cure’

By: 


The remedy to the deadlock on the PLDT-Digitel transaction—the prospective consolidation that brought back excitement to the telco industry, only to be indefinitely frozen—is now literally around the corner. In fact, all indicators suggest that the deal could finally be consummated, but at a certain cost.
What regulators are asking for, our sources intimated, is for the group of Manuel V. Pangilinan to give up the frequency of Smart Communication’s unit Connectivity Unlimited Resource Enterprise Inc. (CURE), which, in turn, owns the Red Mobile brand (which has about 1.5 million subscribers as of end-June). CURE, previously owned by the group of former Trade Minister Roberto V. Ongpin, bagged a much-coveted 3G frequency (10 megahertz in the 2100 MHz band) in 2006, but as soon as the company was flipped to Smart, there were recurring threats from telecom regulators to strip it of this frequency. In short, influential people have been hot on the trail of CURE long before the Gokongweis agreed to cede control of Digitel to MVP.
From what we gather, giving up CURE’s frequency is a trade-off that MVP’s group may be willing to take if this is all that’s needed to appease regulators’ (and a key competitor’s) concern on a virtual monopoly. Even if the group gives back to the state the hardly used CURE frequency, the PLDT group will still be left with Smart and Digitel’s combined 3G frequency of 25 mhz. This “cure” isn’t too bitter a pill to swallow, it seems.—Doris C. Dumlao
Go-to guy
The brother-in-law of a Metro Manila mayor has reportedly become the “go-to guy” for investors wanting to make it big in this city’s booming construction and real estate business.
Only in his 40s, this Porsche-driving “contractor” has allegedly replaced building officials when it comes to approving big-ticket projects in the city.
Biz Buzz sources say the young fellow has become so powerful that no developer can proceed with construction and land development projects in the city without first securing his approval. The trouble is, developers and contractors are compelled to enter into a partnership with the mayor’s brother-in-law—or cough up a rather hefty sum—as the price for entry.
The situation, some say, has turned from bad to worse in recent months. Even the biggest names in the industry are reportedly compelled to “negotiate” with the “go-to guy” if only to get their projects off the ground. As the situation reaches tipping point, developers have quietly begun their exodus, casting their eyes on other cities. Sadly, this city may lose its luster as one of the Metro’s boom capitals. For his sake, we hope the mayor is not part of his brother-in-law’s unsavory trade.—Daxim L. Lucas
‘Smart’ tribute
Smart paid a tasteful tribute to the late Apple co-founder Steve Jobs via the “iLive” ad that came out Friday. But wait, Smart isn’t an official carrier of the iPhone. The tribute was a brainchild of Orlando “Doy” Vea, one of Smart’s founders and now its chief wireless adviser, an industry source said.
Though sympathy knows no color or boundary, many found it ironic that it would be Smart, instead of the exclusive iPhone carrier Globe Telecom, seizing the day in paying tribute to Jobs. In its website, Smart had a different tribute saying “thank you to the great innovator of our time.”  In both ads, the leading wireless provider, however, took care to highlight only Job’s profile, not incorporating the iconic Apple logo.
Is there a subtle message behind all this? With the end of iPhone’s monogamy among carriers in one key market after another including the United Kingdom, the United States, Canada and Germany, will thePhilippines be far behind?—Doris C. Dumlao
Unfit for FIT


For former Finance Secretary Ernest Leung, it’s bad enough that power rates will rise once the feed-in tariff (FIT) rates for renewable energy are approved. Adding insult to injury was the granting of a FIT to an already existing player in the industry.
“Why do we have to give them a bailout? The feed-in tariff is for entities that are not yet there, to encourage them to come in. But they’re already there,” he said, referring to wind power producer Northwind Power Development Corp.
The Energy Regulatory Commission approved a few months ago a FIT of P9.30 a kilowatt-hour (kWh) to the owner and operator of the 33-megawatt wind power facility in Bangui, Ilocos Norte.
Members of the Joint Congressional Power Commission also questioned the granting of the FIT to Northwind, saying this went against the purpose of the scheme, which was to encourage new players to enter the capital-intensive renewable energy market.
The Foundation for Economic Freedom (FEF), of which Leung is treasurer, is staunchly opposing the FIT scheme as a whole as this scheme would “subsidize the profits of renewable energy developers” and “is irregular, oppressive and not in accordance with the law.”
Indeed, the future of the FIT scheme looks bleak if the number of those opposed to it—and, more importantly, their large spheres of influence—was any indication. The Philippine Chamber of Commerce and Industry, the Philippine Exporters Confederation and the Philippine Steelmakers Association are all against it, and so are the Trade Union Congress of the Philippines and the Associated Labor Unions.
Now if management and labor see eye to eye and even join hands to fight a common battle, who knows where the object of their opposition will end up? (The word “kangkungan” comes to mind.) —Abigail L. Ho

Sunday, September 25, 2011

Groups draft proposals to cut power rates


Creation of central clearinghouse for utilities pushed

By: 
8:34 pm | Friday, September 23rd, 2011



The business, academic and labor sectors have teamed up for the first time to submit to the government a proposal to reduce electricity rates and ensure stable power supply.
The Philippine Chamber of Commerce and Industry, the Philippine Exporters Confederation, the Trade Union Congress of the Philippines and the Foundation for Economic Freedom gave 10 recommendations to arrest escalating power rates and four key suggestions to ensure supply security.
In the area of rate reduction, the joint proposal stated that any pending rate increase petitions be deferred. Instead, industry stakeholders should do a “strip and build” analysis of current power costs “and make hard decisions on how to bring it to competitive levels.”
The groups said certain cost burdens should be eliminated, reassigned elsewhere or deferred.
The state-run Power Sector Assets and Liabilities Management Corp. should also defer the collection of the National Power Corp.’s stranded debts and consider other possible options for recovery, including tucking this into the national budget and spreading payment over five to six years.
The government should also strengthen the capability of the Energy Regulatory Commission by giving it fiscal autonomy as well as review the merits of the current performance-based, rate-making methodology.
The groups likewise called for the creation of a “government single power purchaser” that would act as a central clearinghouse from which distribution utilities would buy their power supply at a premium of 2 centavos a kilowatt-hour.
“This would be a new entity. Its presence would eliminate gaming in the industry and ensure competition,” said PCCI energy committee chair Jose Alejandro.
PCCI president Francis Chua added that this scheme would allow the government to ensure that prices were not dictated by investors to the detriment of consumers.
The government should also defer adding more burden to consumers through the feed-in tariff rates for renewable energy.
“The FIT will add to the cost of production and result in as much as P9 billion in additional burden to investors. We have to be more competitive,” said Ernest Leung, treasurer of the Foundation for Economic Freedom.

Business groups hit energy policy

Gov’t asked to address power issues



Top Story


Posted on September 23, 2011 06:47:14 PM

Gov’t asked to address power issues


PRIVATE SECTOR groups on Friday urged the government to address continuing power rate hikes and an impending electricity shortage, claiming that existing laws and current policy have failed to serve consumer interests.

"There appears to be no specific and strong action program or roadmap coming from the Executive department and made known and shared with the private sector, that is specifically addressing the major concerns ... of escalating power rate increase and pending base load and reserve deficiency in Luzon and the crisis in Mindanao," Philippinc Chamber of Commerce and Industry, Inc. (PCCI) President Francis C. Chua said at a press conference.

A joint statement issued during the briefing was signed by the PCCI, Philippine Exporters Confederation, Philippine Steelmakers Association, Foundation for Economic Freedom, and the Trade Union Congress of the Philippines.

As of 2009, they claimed, industrial and residential power rates in the Philippines were higher than in developed countries. The promise of cheaper power under the Electric Power Industry Reform Act (EPIRA), they added, has yet to be realized a decade since the law’s approval.

To address the issue of power rates going up, they urged the following:

• a halt to pending increases and a "strip and build" analysis of power costs where certain costs can be reassigned or deferred;

• put off charging the Power Sector Assets and Liabilities Management Corp.’s stranded costs and consider funding this via the national budget;

• create a "Government Single Power Purchaser" that will conduct auctions and resell electricity at a nominal two-centavo per kilowatt-hour markup;

• give the Energy Regulatory Commission (ERC) limited fiscal autonomy;

• review the performance-based rate-setting mechanism;

• review the design of the Wholesale Electricity Spot Market;

• defer high-costs renewable energy programs;

• focus the direction of the Renewable Energy Board to evaluating RE development;

• review the imposition of membership contributions to the capital component of tariffs charged by power cooperatives; and

• evaluate the benefit of registering the country’s 119 power cooperatives with the Cooperative Development Authority.

Officials particularly pointed to the feed-in tariff (FiT) policy under the renewable energy program, calling it misguided and claiming that it fails to address the fundamental issue of expensive electricity.

"We should be smart enough to wait for the technology to develop and be practical with our decisions. [Foreign groups] are pushing for this [FiT scheme] because of supplier-driven interests. Why are we looking into solar power, when biomass, for example, is so much cheaper?" said Ernest C. Leung, Foundation for Economic Freedom treasurer and a former Finance secretary.

To address supply issues, meanwhile, the private sector groups recommended:

• auctioning off the Agus and Pulangi hydropower plants and accelerating the transfer of two power barges from the Visayas to provide relief to Mindanao;

• accelerate the connection of some island grids to the national grid;

• create additional reserves via an "Anti-electric Power Line Disturbance Order" and imposing at least a 3% reduction in the allowable system loss; and

• that the Energy department use EPIRA provisions to conduct public supply auctions.

MalacaƱang, they said, should move to "achieve leadership integration" among key players such as the Energy and Finance departments, ERC and the Joint Congressional Power Commission.
http://www.bworldonline.com/content.php?section=TopStory&title=Gov%E2%80%99t-asked-to-address-power-issues&id=38815