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Rotational blackouts seen as NGCP raises red alert for Luzon grid

May 31, 2021, Aika Rey

Plant outages amid high temperatures prompted the National Grid Corporation of the Philippines (NGCP) to place the Luzon grid under red alert on Monday, May 31 – the first time it has done so since June 2019.

A red alert means there is insufficient power supply in the grid.

The Department of Energy (DOE) said the red alert would be in effect from 1 pm to 3 pm on Monday. As of 4 pm, the NGCP had yet to announce whether the red alert had been lifted or extended.

This was the initial list of areas told to expect rotational blackouts:

The NGCP later said the following areas would also be hit by rotational blackouts from 2 pm to 3 pm:

Energy Undersecretary Felix Fuentebella said the blackouts would last under one hour.

The NGCP projected that demand would peak at 11,514 megawatts, while supply is at 11,729 MW. That would leave only a 215-MW reserve.

According to officials, there should be a 400-MW reserve to prevent rotational blackouts.

Plant outages

On Monday, planned outages led to 435 MW in lost capacity. For 2021 so far, total outages, including unplanned plant shutdowns, have reached 1,285 MW.

Energy Assistant Secretary Redentor Delola said there is a possibility that yellow and red alerts would “last for the next couple of days” because of the lost capacity.

Plant outages amid high temperatures prompted the National Grid Corporation of the Philippines (NGCP) to place the Luzon grid under red alert on Monday, May 31 – the first time it has done so since June 2019.

A red alert means there is insufficient power supply in the grid.

The Department of Energy (DOE) said the red alert would be in effect from 1 pm to 3 pm on Monday. As of 4 pm, the NGCP had yet to announce whether the red alert had been lifted or extended.

This was the initial list of areas told to expect rotational blackouts:

The NGCP later said the following areas would also be hit by rotational blackouts from 2 pm to 3 pm:

Energy Undersecretary Felix Fuentebella said the blackouts would last under one hour.

The NGCP projected that demand would peak at 11,514 megawatts, while supply is at 11,729 MW. That would leave only a 215-MW reserve.

According to officials, there should be a 400-MW reserve to prevent rotational blackouts.

Plant outages

On Monday, planned outages led to 435 MW in lost capacity. For 2021 so far, total outages, including unplanned plant shutdowns, have reached 1,285 MW.

Energy Assistant Secretary Redentor Delola said there is a possibility that yellow and red alerts would “last for the next couple of days” because of the lost capacity.

“We are able to maintain a reserve level of 1,000 MW to 1,200 MW. Now that we no longer have Ilijan (natural gas plant), we are left with 400 to 600 MW. But with the additional planned outage of San Roque (hydroelectric plant), that brought us to the red alert level,” Delola said.

Fuentebella reiterated the department’s stance that sufficient reserves are needed and warned that penalties could be imposed on generation companies.

“We were highlighting this need since two years ago. Sadly, we don’t want to impose any penalties, but we really have to make those accountable responsible for the situation,” Fuentebella said.

The DOE said the GNPower Mariveles and Sem-Calaca coal plants have been offline since February 2021 and December 2020, respectively.

The NGCP also raised a yellow alert for 11 am to 1 pm on Monday. A yellow alert does not necessarily mean power outages.

Earlier, the DOE said it was not expecting power outages for the dry season as long as there would be no additional plant shutdowns.

The DOE also said on Monday that demand is dependent on the heat index as well, since a 1°C increase in temperature could lead to a 100-MW increase in power demand.

The last time the Luzon grid was placed under red alert was for certain hours from June 18 to 21 in 2019. – Rappler.com

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