PLN to increase power charges for industry
Thursday, August 4 2005 - 02:05 AM WIB
PLN will raise the multiplier used between 6 p.m. and 10 p.m. to 2 times of the normal rate from the current figure of between 1.4 and 1.5 set for Java, Bali, Sumatra, Kalimantan and Sulawesi, meaning that peak-time electricity will be twice as expensive as that utilized during off-peak times, the company’s marketing and services director Sunggu Anwar Aritonang said on Wednesday.
“The new multiplier will be effective as per September,” he told reporters after a meeting with industrialists. “We will issue the decision as soon as possible.”
The policy would be applied to firms that have power utilization capacities of more than 14 kilovolt amperes (kVA), as well as to government offices, charitable organizations and businesses with capacities of more than 200 kVA.
PLN will also impose a penalty for electricity usage during peak hours that exceeds the set quota.
According to PLN, peak-hour demand surged after the government hiked fuel prices in Match, indicating that many companies switched to using power generated by the state firm instead of producing their own electricity.
In compensation for the higher multiplier, PLN w ill apply a discounted t~riff to companies that manage to shift more than 50 percel4 of their power usage in peak hours to off-peak hours, Aritonang said.
Executive secretary of the Indonesian Textile Association, E.G. Ismy, who attended the meeting, said it would be impossible to shift electricity consumption to off-peak hours as the industry worked around the clock.
Power contributed 30 percent of production costs for spinning operations and 18 percent for weaving operations, he said.
“Fuel prices (for industry) have been increased, and now electricity charges. How can we possibly compete with China?” Ismy asked.
“The only way (to cut power usage during peak hours) is by reducing production, which will mean laying off workers,” Ismy added.
Meanwhile, Yos Rizal Anwar of the Indonesian Foundry Industries Association said industry players would comply with the new policy.
PLN generates electricity in a sequence, utilizing first hydropower, geothermal energy, gas, coal and, lastly, the more expensive oil.
Although oil-fired plants contribute only some 30 percent of the country’s total power capacity, petrolettm accounts for nearly 70 percent of total fuel costs.
PLN has said that it will need 11.44 million kiloliters (kl) of oil to generate power this year, higher than its quota of 8.35 million kl of subsidied fuel. State oil and gas firm PT Pertamma has said that PLN may have to pay market prices for the additjonal supplies.(*)
