Senator Win Gatchalian called on the Department of Energy (DOE) to immediately investigate the power outages hitting Luzon after the National Grid Corporation of the Philippines (NGCP) placed the grid under red alert due to insufficient power reserves.
Gatchalian said the DOE should also look into the possibility of collusion among power producers due to thin electricity reserves in the midst of high demand.
“DOE should also look into the possibility of collusion among power producers.”
“The red alerts for Luzon issued by the National Grid Corp. of the Philippines today (Wednesday) is surprising, especially after the Department of Energy repeatedly assured us just last week that there is ample reserve throughout the dry season,” said the legislator and chair of the Senate committee on energy.
“These kinds of confusing messaging do not help the public at all,” the lawmaker added.
“These kinds of confusing messaging do not help the public at all.”
The NGCP said the red alert was scheduled on Wednesday from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. and 2 p.m. to 4 p.m.
The DOE said the red alert was declared because of the projected high demand and that certain power plants were either offline or not operating at full capacity, resulting in lower reserves.
“Sinabi ng DOE may sapat na kuryente at may sobra pa kahit tagtuyo. Pero ngayong araw, limang planta ang hindi gumana at dahil dito ay nawalan tayo ng 1,702 megawatts na kuryente(The DOE assured us of sufficient electricity during the dry season. But today, five plants are not operating which led to a loss of 1,702-megawatt source of electricity),” the senator said.
“Nagsimula na rin ang Meralco ng manual load dropping kaninang ala-una ng hapon. Ibig sabihin ay may mga kababayan na tayo na nagtitiis sa init at kawalan ng kuryente (Meralco also started its manual load dropping at 1 p.m. That means some of us have to suffer from both heat and power outage),” he added.
Gatchalian said the energy department should put contingency measures in place to ensure that there would be no power interruptions as election day approaches.