By Danessa O. Rivera (The
Philippine Star) | Updated January 17, 2016 - 12:00am
MANILA, Philippines – AC Energy
Holdings Inc. sees liquefied natural gas (LNG) facilities to become viable
investments if auctioned by government under public-private partnership (PPP)
development.
The LNG pipeline and terminal
facilities should be offered under a single auction to attract investors
because they are inter-dependent, AC Energy president and CEO Eric Francia
said.
“I don’t see any economic rationale
or basis, at least from where we sit in terms of making LNG and natural gas
investment competitive and economically feasible,” he said.
The Department of Energy (DOE)
issued last year a new policy mix, with both renewable energy (RE) and LNG
having a 30-percent share each while the balance would be shared by the
existing fuel sources in the country such as coal and diesel among others.
A number of players have expressed
interest in putting up LNG terminals, like First Gen Corp. of the Lopez Group
and Manila Electric Group, but no plans have come to fruition yet due to the
high cost to put up the facilities.
The long-delayed P10.52-billion
Batangas-Manila natural gas pipeline (BatMan 1) was also supposed to be
auctioned under the Aquino administration flagship PPP program, however the DOE
is eyeing other options to implement the project due to off-taker
concerns.
Given the issues on viability and
demand, Francia said government must fast track the release of an LNG master
plan for the industry to flourish.
“There should be a very tangible and
robust master plan. It’s not going to be easy. DOE should do the master plan
since it’s policy and planning,” the company official added.
The company official noted the
government-led LNG pipeline could be an enabler for the gas industry that can
supply to power, automotive and industrial sectors.
“If you have a pipeline from
Batangas to Manila, once you go through industrial parks, you can do a lot
things like co-generation. So the economics now will change because you’re not
only using it for power but also for manufacturing processes. It can also be
for automotive and transportation use which links now to policy,” Francia said.
But until that happens, AC Energy
will continue to develop mainly coal-fired power plants to satisfy the
immediate demand for power.
“We will be active in the
development in traditional coal but also other technologies. But given the
fluid nature and the uncertainties in gas and RE, I cannot pin down figures
(for future project capacity),” Francia said.
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