MANILA, Philippines — Manila Electric Company (Meralco) said on Tuesday that electricity rates would go down this month, compared to August due to an expected lower generation charge brought by a stronger Philippine peso against the US dollar., This news data comes from:http://www.xs888999.com
"We expect a lower generation charge to pull the overall rate downwards this September," Joe R. Zaldarriaga, Meralco vice president and head of Corporate Communications, said in a statement.
"This development was able to more than offset the cost recovery of SMC Global Power Holdings Corporation for its terminated contracts, the implementation of which was given go signal by the Energy Regulatory Commission (ERC) which began this month," he added.
"Overall, we are optimistic that the reduction in generation charge will be able to offset increase in other bill components. We’re set to announce actual rate adjustment tomorrow," Zaldarriaga said.
Meralco: Lower electricity rates expected for Sept
Previously in August, Meralco announced an upward rate adjustment of P0.6268 per kilowatt-hour (kWh) due to higher generation and transmission charges, bringing the overall rate for a typical household to P13.2703 per kWh from P12.6435 per kWh back in July.

It added that for residential customers consuming 200 kWh, the adjustment is equivalent to an increase of around P125 in their total electricity bill.
- Duterte's son dares House to show ghost projects instead of targeting family
- Discaya’s construction companies competed against each other during biddings
- HEADLINES: DPWH fires Bulacan engineers, blacklists contractors over anomalous projects | Sept. 5, 2025
- Sara favors punishing officials, lifestyle checks
- NACC renews appeal: Adopt neglected kids
- Zelenskyy meets European leaders on Ukraine security guarantees
- Former Bulacan district engineer admits going to casinos
- India to cut taxes on hundreds of consumer goods to boost local demand following steep US tariffs
- Palace rejects China's 'troublemaker' tag
- Alice Guo faces new cases over POGO land