ADVERTISEMENT
Filtered By: Topstories
News
Meralco chief, 7 other execs to get P97M in salaries in '08 - solon
MANILA, Philippines - A senator on Tuesday said that the salaries of the chief executive officer and seven other Manila Electric Company senior executives for 2008 will total P97 million. And this, according to Senator Miriam Defensor-Santiago, is being paid for by the consumers and appears to be an instance of "management abuse." Santiago, chair of the Joint Congressional Power Commission (Powercom), said high power rates are caused by apparent management abuse not only in the Manila Electric Co. (Meralco), but also in the National Power Corporation (NPC), and by apparent laxity in the Energy Regulatory Commission (ERC). âConsumers are paying for the high annual salaries of the Meralco chief executive officer and seven other senior executive officers which in 2008 will total some P97 million. The officers and directors as a group will get some P170 million. This appears to be management abuse," Santiago said in a statement. âThese apparent management abuses and lax regulation are the reasons why the Philippines has one of the highest power rates in the world, second only to Japan in Asia," she also said. Santiago listed âapparent management abuses" by the three agencies as follows: · Meralco is reportedly buying electricity from NPC and WESM (Wholesale Electricity Spot Market) during peak periods, when prices are high, resulting in high pass-through generation charges to its consumers. · Meralco and NPC entered into an agreement to ask ERC to allow Meralco to pass on to its consumers its unpaid debts to NPC. · Power rates are high in Luzon, than in Visayas and Mindanao. · NPC apparently manipulates its rates based on Time-Of-Use (TOU) which are very high, and which are passed on to consumers. · NPC apparently gives preferential rates to economic zone consumers, but passes on the cost of the discounts to its other consumers. · NPC charges its consumers for its revenue requirements, which seem to include its P7 billion bad debts. · NPC buy its power from IPPs (Independent Power Producers) but at higher rates than the avoided cost, or the marginal cost, and then passes on the higher rates to the consumers · ERC has neglected its duty to set the new caps on recoverable systems loss, and use questionable âperformance-based regulation," valuation of assets, and benchmarking methodology. Santiago said the possible penalties for management abuse can be legislative, corporate, and criminal. Meralco operates under a franchise, meaning a right conferred by the government to engage in specific business, including the rights necessary for public utility companies to carry on their operations. âThe legislative remedy provided by the Constitution is for Congress to amend or repeal the Meralco franchise, as required by the common good," she said. The senator added that the corporate remedy is to penalize the responsible Meralco managers, by voting them out in the next stockholdersâ meeting this month. âThe criminal remedy is to file cases in court against the responsible Meralco and NPC officers for the crime called âcombination in restraint of trade,â which refers to any conspiracy âfor the purpose of making transactions prejudicial to lawful commerce, or of increasing the market prices,â" she said. - GMANews.TV
More Videos
Most Popular