Monday, September 12, 2022
Luzon Grid under Yellow Alert, to be heightened to Red Alert Monday afternoon
The National Grid Corporation of the Philippines (NGCP) placed the Luzon Grid under Yellow Alert status on Monday morning and is set to heighten this to Red Alert in the afternoon, after the forced outage of at least seven power plants.
In an advisory, the NGCP said the Luzon Grid was placed under Yellow Alert from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m., indicating that the grid has thin reserves based on supply and demand.
The available capacity was estimated at 10,727 megawatts, with the peak demand seen at 10,585 megawatts.
The Luzon Grid will also be placed under Red Alert from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. on Monday, indicating that there is zero ancillary services or a generation deficiency exists.
This will then be downgraded back to yellow alert from 4 p.m. to 9 p.m.
According to the NGCP, there were 3,627 megawatts lost from the grid after seven power plants were on forced outage while three were running on derated capacities. — Jon Viktor D. Cabuenas/RSJ, GMA News
Luzon grid tumbled into ‘red alert’; brownouts feared
Following a “brownout weekend” that affected millions of consumers, the Luzon grid tumbled into a new round of “red alert” on Monday, Sept. 12, due to a confluence of factors ignited by transmission line tripping, forced outages of power plants, and de-rating of electricity generation of some facilities.
System operator National Grid Corporation of the Philippines (NGCP) declared “red alert” in the biggest power grid of Luzon from 1:00 to 4:00pm, indicating then that some consumers in the grid may suffer rotational blackouts within that period.
Power utility giant Manila Electric Company (Meralco) indicated that it already advised its interruptible load program (ILP) participants for them to switch on their generating units to ease strained capacity in the main grid.
NGCP reported that at least seven electric generating plants had been on simultaneously forced outages leading to a loss of more than 3,400 megawatts in the power system.
The generating facilities on unscheduled downtimes had been: Unit 1 of GNPower Dinginin plant of the Ayala-Aboitiz joint venture; Calaca-2 plant of the Consunji group; Masinloc 2 and 3 as well as Sual 1 and 2 plants of the San Miguel group; and the Quezon Power plant.
The sudden outages of the power plants had been aggravated by the de-rated (reduced) capacity of the other power plants, that in turn resulted in the additional capacity loss of 226MW in the Luzon grid.
The plants with de-rated capacities, NCGCP said, had been Unit 2 of the GNPower Mariveles plant which is also a joint venture of the Ayala-Aboitiz group; unit 1 of the Masinloc plant of the San Miguel group; and Unit 2 of the South Luzon Thermal Energy Corporation (SLTEC) facility of the Ayala group.
On Sunday, several parts of Metro, as well as provincial areas, had been tormented with brownouts because of the tripping of the 500-kilovolt Nagsaag-Bolo lines 1 and 2 of NGCP, hence, that subsequently caused the non-availability of the Sual and Masinloc plants into the power system.
Industry players have sounded concerned about the reliability of the power system as the tripping of the transmission line happened at a time of low consumption weekend, and weather temperatures were even at a low scale.
According to Meralco, more than 600,000 of its customers had been afflicted with brownout predicaments on Sunday – causing an inconvenience to the public while they are on their usual weekend break from work.
The affected customers are those in various parts of Metro Manila such as Caloocan, Makati, Manila, Muntinlupa, Paranaque, Pasay, Pasig, Pateros, Quezon City, Taguig as well as the provinces of Bulacan, Cavite, Laguna, Rizal and Quezon.
https://mb.com.ph/2022/09/12/luzon-grid-tumbled-into-red-alert-brownouts-feared/