By Riza Lozada
The Department of Energy (DOE) has found that some gas stations are using methanol or methyl alcohol, which is corrosive, instead of ethanol in the blended fuel they sell.
A subsequent crackdown on the adulterated gasoline products resulted in sanctions against 46 gas stations, which in extreme cases will result in their closure, according to Energy Secretary Alfonso Cusi said.
Until last month, a total of 924 retail outlets and gas stations were inspected, he said.
While consumers lauded the crackdown, some gas-station owners said the the DOE’s surprise visits to various retail stations were ineffective since they did not establish the source of the diluted petroleum products, as gas stations only sell what they are supplied with.
Cusi said that of the stations inspected, three belonged to major oil distributors, 18 to independent fuel sellers, while 25 were “white stations” or retail outlets or gas stations that have no more than five existing service stations.
The Biofuels Act of 2006 requires gas companies to use 10 percent biofuel for all oil products sold for use of vehicles. Biofuel or those that are generated from plants are more expensive than refined oil products.
The inspections found that some gasoline stations mix methanol of up to 16 percent with the gasoline they sell.
Cusi, nonetheless, said the DOE campaign is meant to protect consumers from substandard petroleum products. He ordered the Oil Industry Management Bureau, an agency under the DOE, to conduct a series of inspections on several retail outlets and gas stations in Metro Manila, Cavite, Rizal, Batangas, and Quezon.
“We have to protect our consumers from buying and using adulterated petroleum products, hence we are conducting onsite inspections,” Cusi said. “We cannot allow the oil players, especially illegal peddlers, to short-change our people by selling them adulterated petroleum products.”
The DOE said it will continue to monitor gas stations; he urged the public to be vigilant and report any irregularity to the appropriate authorities, Cusi said.
The DOE said while methanol content is a natural component of bioethanol, it should not automatically be mixed with gasoline products without the buyers knowing it.
“We are strictly monitoring the components of biofuels, because we have specific standards for them. As a blend to raw gasoline products, E10 has a very minimal methanol content, because it is inherent to the fuel but it is not intentionally blended,” Cusi said.
“Oil companies cannot use the methanol component in E10 as their leeway to replace ethanol with methanol in their products, because that’s an altogether different scenario,” Cusi added.
Cusi said the illegal blending of methanol with gasoline is prohibited because “it can harm motor engines due to methanol’s corrosive characteristics.”
Methanol, however, is not a regulated substance, and isfreely available.
The DOE said it will meet with the Samahan sa Pilipinas ng mga Industriya Kimika (Spik) or the Chemical Industries Association of the Philippines to identify the sources of the adulterated fuel.
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