Published July 21, 2017, 10:00 PM By Reuters
Manila – The Philippines has
shortlisted six countries and will choose one from them as a partner for its
planned $2-billion receiving and distribution facility for imported LNG, an
official from the state-run energy firm PNOC said on Thursday.
The countries that have been
shortlisted are China, Japan, South Korea, Singapore, Indonesia and the United
Arab Emirates, said Arwin Ardon, head of the team at the Philippine National
Oil Company (PNOC) that is overseeing the project.
The construction of the project,
which includes a 5 million tons-per-annum storage facility, could be completed
by 2020, or four years before the country’s Malampaya natural gas field is
depleted, Energy Secretary Alfonso Cusi said last month.
The Philippines’ energy demand is
set to triple by 2040, with electricity requirements anticipated to grow four
times from 2015. To support this spike, the country needs to step up power
generation capacity by 7,000 megawatts over the next five years and wants
foreign investors to help.
“(The LNG project) is a complete
package with storage facility, regasification, a power plant that is scalable
up to 1,000 megawatts (MW), and redistribution,” Ardon told reporters on the
sidelines of a power industry conference. The power plant will initially have a
capacity of 200 MW.
Philippines aims to start importing
liquefied natural gas (LNG) before Malampaya gas, currently used to produce a
fifth of the country’s power supply, runs out by 2024.
Ardon said PNOC was looking to use
government-owned banked or unused gas from Malampaya, currently valued at about
$640 million, as equity for the LNG project, together with the government land
where the facility will be built.
On the government-to-government
partnership for the project, Ardon said PNOC was pushing for a 60-40 equity
arrangement, with the Philippines taking a controlling interest. However, he
did not give a timeline on when a partner would be chosen.
Ardon named local electricity producer First Gen
Corp. as a potential LNG buyer.
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