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Wednesday
06 Jan 2021

Philippines’ ERC Denies Feed-in-Tariff for Ocean Energy

06 Jan 2021  by Amir Garanovic   

The Energy Regulatory Commission (ERC) of the Philippines has denied the petition filed by the National Renewable Energy Board (NREB) for Feed-in-Tariff (FIT) for electricity generated from ocean energy resources.

The Philippine flag (Courtesy of the Government of the Philippines)

Consequently, NREB was directed to file a separate petition for a new Ocean FIT rate based on tidal in-stream energy conversion technology which is the predominant ocean energy technology in the country.

Agnes VST Devanadera, ERC Chairperson and CEO, said: “Majority of ocean power projects awarded with service contracts by the Department of Energy (DOE) uses tidal in-stream energy conversion.

“The Commission, therefore, found it reasonable to use the said technology, instead of the Ocean Thermal Energy Conversion (OTEC), as the representative project for the determination of the FIT rate for ocean technology, pursuant to Section 5 of the FIT Rules”.

The ERC recognized that there is more information available on the tidal in-stream energy conversion technology which can be the basis for the calculation of the initial FIT for ocean energy, instead of OTEC whose operations have not yet reached commercial scale.

The ERC previously deferred the approval of the FIT for ocean technology when it issued its decision on the FIT rates in 2012.

This was due NREB’s proposal that featured OTEC technology for the representative project, while at the time, there was no OTEC plant in commercial operation with only a handful of pilot projects have been launched in the world, according to ERC.

Thus, the ERC only approved the FIT rates for wind, solar, biomass, and run-of-river technologies, pending commercialization of OTEC.

Further, the ERC in its decision emphasized that the OTEC technology, up to present, remains short of commercial deployment.

“The Commission deemed it prudent to evaluate and determine the reasonable levels of FIT on the basis of information that are relevant in the context of ocean technology developments in the country and in other jurisdictions. The said considerations are vital particularly in view of the fact that the FIT are costs that are ultimately passed on to the consumers”, Devanadera added.

This article is reproduced at www.offshore-energy.biz

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