A request by Taiwan Power Co (Taipower,
The request, which is currently being considered by the Ministry of Economic Affairs, would effectively freeze government approvals of any new cogenerators stemming from what Taipower asserts are significant losses.
Taipower says that the fixed price of NT$1.62 per kilowatt hour at which the company is legally obliged to buy power from cogenerators is too high -- often varying greatly from the production cost -- and is causing significant financial harm.
The ministry is expected to finalize a policy on the issue by next month.
Newly appointed Taipower Chairman Lin Wen-yuan (
This can only be averted if the government stops encouraging private investment in cogeneration units or independent power producers.
Under a policy of boosting the nation's extremely low reserve power margin -- the amount of extra power available at maximum load -- the government in 1988 began encouraging companies to establish their own cogenerators.
A cogenerator is essentially a mini power plant that can be run by the excess energy generated by manufacturing lines in traditional industries or an independent fuel source such as natural gas or coal.
Cogenerators can sell excess or all of their electricity to the state utility at a fixed price of NT$1.62 per kilowatt hours regardless of the production costs.
Independent power producers, classified as bonafide electricity plants in their own right, are generally much larger and can sell to any integrated power company -- which for the time being means Taipower -- at a price negotiated between the two.
"Due to perceived losses Taipower simply doesn't want to be made to buy power from any more cogeneration plants," said an official from the ministry's Energy Commission.
Taipower's base average cost of production is NT$1.2 per kilowatt hours which it says is far lower than the price at which it must buy it, the official said.
Currently there are 58 cogenerators selling an estimated 1.8 million kilowatt hours to Taipower every year, said the official.
Additionally, when the cogenerator policy was devised Taiwan's power reserve margin was down around 3 percent to 5 percent, but has now risen to 13 percent with expectations to climb above 15 percent by year end, the official said.
But according to Ho Chun-jen (
Ho, whose company operates one 165-megawatt, gas-fired power plant in the park with another 232-megawatt plant in the planning stage, said Taipower's real problem with cogenerators is Formosa Plastic Group's (
"Taipower is affected mainly by the Formosa Plastic Corp (
Currently Formosa has two 60-megawatt cogeneration units at its Mailiao complex as well as three 60-megawatt units classified as being provided by an independent power producer, according to Taipower.
While Taipower purchases all the power from the three IPP-classified units at a negotiated rate of NT$0.9 per kilowatt hour, the excess 40 megawatts from the two cogenerators are purchased at the set rate of NT$1.62, both well above the NT$0.5 production cost of the coal-fired plant.
By targeting all cogenerators for blame Taipower is being "misleading," said Ho, who said that its losses have resulted mainly from the excess purchase of the Mailiao plant.
Production costs of many cogenerators are extremely high due to the choice of natural gas as a fuel, Ho said. The cost of production is about the same as the government-set purchase price, he added. "We use natural gas as a fuel and we lose money."
One foreign business executive, who declined to be named, agreed, saying the government should have limited the amount of power it purchased from large cogenerators like Formosa, which claims it sells 53 percent of its total output to Taipower.
"That's a lotta juice ... they're making a lot of money," said the executive. "They should have limited it so that the total percentage of electricity a cogenerator can sell cannot exceed 30 to 40 percent unless specifically approved by the government," he added.
Taipei officials declined to name a specific cogenerator or independent power producer when stating its case for halting approvals of new suppliers, saying only that current conditions were unreasonable.
COMPETITION: AMD, Intel and Qualcomm are unveiling new laptop and desktop parts in Las Vegas, arguing their technologies provide the best performance for AI workloads Advanced Micro Devices Inc (AMD), the second-biggest maker of computer processors, said its chips are to be used by Dell Technologies Inc for the first time in PCs sold to businesses. The chipmaker unveiled new processors it says would make AMD-based PCs the best at running artificial intelligence (AI) software. Dell has decided to use the chips in some of its computers aimed at business customers, AMD executives said at CES in Las Vegas on Monday. Dell’s embrace of AMD for corporate PCs — it already uses the chipmaker for consumer devices — is another blow for Intel Corp as the company
ADVANCED: Previously, Taiwanese chip companies were restricted from building overseas fabs with technology less than two generations behind domestic factories Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC, 台積電), a major chip supplier to Nvidia Corp, would no longer be restricted from investing in next-generation 2-nanometer chip production in the US, the Ministry of Economic Affairs said yesterday. However, the ministry added that the world’s biggest contract chipmaker would not be making any reckless decisions, given the weight of its up to US$30 billion investment. To safeguard Taiwan’s chip technology advantages, the government has barred local chipmakers from making chips using more advanced technologies at their overseas factories, in China particularly. Chipmakers were previously only allowed to produce chips using less advanced technologies, specifically
MediaTek Inc (聯發科) yesterday said it is teaming up with Nvidia Corp to develop a new chip for artificial intelligence (AI) supercomputers that uses architecture licensed from Arm Holdings PLC. The new product is targeting AI researchers, data scientists and students rather than the mass PC market, the company said. The announcement comes as MediaTek makes efforts to add AI capabilities to its Dimensity chips for smartphones and tablets, Genio family for the Internet of Things devices, Pentonic series of smart TVs, Kompanio line of Arm-based Chromebooks, along with the Dimensity auto platform for vehicles. MeidaTek, the world’s largest chip designer for smartphones
BRAVE NEW WORLD: Nvidia believes that AI would fuel a new industrial revolution and would ‘do whatever we can’ to guide US AI policy, CEO Jensen Huang said Nvidia Corp cofounder and chief executive officer Jensen Huang (黃仁勳) on Tuesday said he is ready to meet US president-elect Donald Trump and offer his help to the incoming administration. “I’d be delighted to go see him and congratulate him, and do whatever we can to make this administration succeed,” Huang said in an interview with Bloomberg Television, adding that he has not been invited to visit Trump’s home base at Mar-a-Lago in Florida yet. As head of the world’s most valuable chipmaker, Huang has an opportunity to help steer the administration’s artificial intelligence (AI) policy at a moment of rapid change.