By: Miguel R. Camus - 01:08 AM June
19, 2017
Listed MRC Allied Inc. is
reinventing itself as a power company, revealing on Friday an ambitious plan to
build up a portfolio of 1,000 megawatts (MW) of “clean and renewable” energy by
2022.
Gladys Nalda, newly appointed CEO
and president of MRC, told reporters on the sidelines of the company’s annual
meeting late Friday that they were prepared to spend anywhere from P80 billion
to P100 billion during this period to invest in power sources such as solar and
liquefied natural gas (LNG).
So far, the company has a total of
160 MW solar power projects in its pipeline. These are the 60-MW Naga Solar
Project within its township property in Cebu and a 100-MW project in Clark
Green City, Pampanga.
The company expects earnings
contributions from its power ventures to start around 2019, Nalda said.
MRC’s main assets are in property
and mining, and it listed no revenue sources and profits since 2014. It posted
a net loss of P65.8 million in 2016.
Nalda said the company was counting
on the support of its main shareholder, an investment holding company called
Menlo Capital Corp., which owns 52 percent of MRC. Menlo’s shareholders include
Lucio Tan Jr., son of taipan Lucio Tan, and Benjamin Bitanga, MRC’s former
president.
Nalda, former vice president for
legal and corporate services at PNOC Renewable Corp., said the company was also
open to partnerships with other groups to reach its goal.
“We are open to so many business
models, with the help of our investors and consultants,” she said.
For 2017, MRC would be targeting to
raise about P2 billion from a private placement transaction and preferred share
sale, she said.
Nalda said the timing was right to
enter the renewable power sector, although the decision traces its roots to
2015 following a “planning session” on its future direction and strategy.
MRC cited increasing demand for
power, declining costs of renewable power technology, and the potential to
acquire existing power plants.
Nalda said MRC has yet to identify
the specific mix of power sources.
“We want to do everything that’s
clean, not necessarily [renewable energy],” she said, noting that LNG was a big
opportunity.
“It’s challenging because there is
no existing big LNG developer,” she added. “With LNG alone, the 1,000 [MW] is
easy.”
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