Recent newspaper reports indicated that the Department of Energy (DOE) has deferred the launching of the commercial operations of Wholesale Electricity Spot Market (WESM) in the Visayas region due to the report of an Australian firm, Intelligent Energy Systems (IES) (http://www.philstar.com/archives.php?aid=200804157&type=2&). IES was commissioned by DOE to assess the readiness of the said region in having an electricity market operation. 
IES reports the following:
- Visayas region is not ready to have its own      electricity market due to the inadequacy of power supply.
 - Upgrading of transmission lines as one of the      remedial measures to prevent any power shortages or interruptions.
 - Market participants must have long-term contracts for      their power supply.
 - The estimated peak demand for Visayas is 1300MW while      the available generation capacity is 1700MW plus the High Voltage Direct      Current (HVDC) link output of 150MW.
 - Visayas is suffering from scarce of generation      reserves.
 - Involuntary load shedding or manual interruption of      power is practiced regularly in the Visayas grid.
 
Here are my thoughts based on the newspapers’ and news websites’ reports:
- Inadequacy of generation is one main reason why an      electricity market should not be established. DOE knows this even      beforehand since they report power statistics in their website (http://www.doe.gov.ph/EP/Powerstat.htm).      Electricity market brings competition to the generation sector thus with      scarce of power supply this will not be true further.
 - Upgrading of existing transmission lines to prevent      power shortages may fall short to solve the problem. Imagine having a two      bus system with a transmission line of good capacity where the amount of      load is almost equal to the generation. Here’s the scenario, if some of      the generation may be out for maintenance or some plant trouble, then      reserves is not sufficient and may impact the reliability and quality of      supply at the loads. If we add another transmission line this will      increase the transfer capability of generation to the load but will not      increase the amount of generation and reserves since the system is out of      power generation! Though generation competition requires transmission      capacity, this does not solve generation scarcity in the Visayas grid.
 - Long term contracts will freeze the electricity price      whether in a market situation or regulated conditions. This is a good      approach for hedging in markets.
 - The evaluation of the real power generation (MW) is a      welcome approach but may not be complete since reactive power (MVAR)      should be integrated. Visayas grid suffers from voltage problems with      generation deficit plus insufficient MVAR sources. Note that the 1700MW      generation can help to provide MVARs but having mostly 69kV systems, in      case of Visayas, this reactive power may be not enough.
 - Reserves are needed for operating a power system.      These are resources that can be relied upon in the event the power system      experiences untoward disturbance. In an electricity market, these      resources are allocated and paid accordingly. Having insufficient reserves      will fail the spirit of competition in an electricity market.
 - Load shedding or dropping may be cause by      underfrequency or undervoltage. This is a result of under generation.      Payment to the dropped loads must be given since they help out in alleviating      operational constraints in the Visayas grid. Loads that are shed are      acting as “reserves” in this case, so incentives must be attributed to      them.
 
Overall, to solve the Visayas power situation, the regulation and politics of power generation investment in the 
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