Energy production in the Philippines is concentrated in the power sector. Geothermal power accounts for the countrys largest share of indigenous energy production, followed by hydropower, Natural Gas, Coal, and Oil. The Philippine government has made shifting from reliance on imported oil a major goal, and is pushing the current boom in natural gas-fired electricity development.
The most significant event in the Philippine energy industry in recent years was the Electric Power Industry Reform Act (EPIRA) of 2001. After seven years of congressional debate and litigation, the Act came into force on June 26, 2001.  The act has three main objectives: 1) to develop indigenous resources; 2) to cut the high cost of electric power in the Philippines; and 3) to encourage foreign investment.  Passage of the Act set into motion the deregulation of the power industry and the breakup and eventual privatization of state-owned enterprises.
EPIRA required the state-owned utility National Power Corporation (Napocor) to break up its vertically integrated assets into smaller sub-sectors such as generation, transmission, distribution and supply in order to prepare for eventual privatization.   The result will be a system in which privatized generators will sell directly to private distribution companies. Working with consultants from the law firm of Hunton and Williams (U.S.), the government has designated two new entities designed solely for the eventual privatization of state assets.  These two concerns, the National Transmission Corporation (TransCo) and the Power Sector Assets and Liabilities Management (PSALM) Corporation, have assumed the states high voltage transmission infrastructure, and power plants, respectively.  The government also will sell off its share of Meralco, a vital distribution utility on the island of Luzon that serves Manila and the immediate surrounding area by buying power from various Independent Power Producers (IPPs).
Napocor will need to transfer its existing power purchase obligations to private distributors, and also to renegotiate high-priced contracts. The cost savings lie in the fact that private distributors will likely be unwilling to enter into agreements that are above market rates. There are other financial incentives for the government as Well. Napocors $23 billion in debt and $9 billion in power purchase agreements are unsustainable, and the government must already contribute $300 million per year to keep Napocor afloat.
In order to make the sale of Napocor more attractive to investors, the government has absorbed a significant amount of Napocors debt.  In addition, the $9 billion in power purchase agreements with IPPs also will be sold off. The transmission system has been transferred to an independent company, Transco, which is to be privatized. According to deregulation laws, no single potential buyer will be allowed to own more than 30% of the Philippines generating assets. Privatization of Transco has been delayed, though, due to the fact that three bidding rounds in 2003 and 2004 resulted failed to yield an acceptable proposal. After many delays, the Philippine government plans to make another attempt at privatization in March 2006.
Electricity demand in the Philippines is expected to grow by around 9% per year through the end of the decade, necessitating as much as 10,000 MW of new installed electric capacity. Current contracts will provide about half that amount, with the remainder expected to be filled once the market deregulates. Medium-term increases in power demand are to be satisfied largely by the three gas-fired plants (Ilijan, Santa Rita, and San Lorenzo) that will be linked to the Malampaya natural gas field. The Korea Electric Power Corporation (KEPCO) began commercial operation of the 1,200-MW Ilijan plant in June 2002. KEPCO will run the plant under a build-operate-transfer scheme for 20 years, after which ownership will revert to Napocor. Minority stakeholders in the plant are Southern Energy of the United States (20%) plus Mitsubishi (21%) and Kyushu Power (8%) of Japan. First Gas Power completed a 1,020-MW plant at Santa Rita in August 2000; the plant switched from fuel oil to natural gas in January 2002.