October 12, 2017 By Victor V. Saulon,
Sub-Editor
THE Energy department’s
plan to put up an integrated liquefied natural gas (LNG) facility has attracted
interest from the private sector, including foreign financial institutions that
are willing to partner with the government in funding the project, bankers
said.
“We have lots of
interest coming from overseas — from Asia, from Europe and the US — on how to
co-finance this with the government and the private sector,” Bonifacio M.
Banzon, BPI Capital Corp. head of project finance, told participants at AVCJ’s
Private Equity & Ventures Forum on Wednesday at Fairmont Hotel in
Makati City.
He declined to disclose
details on the interested entities when asked on the sidelines of the forum.
Other bankers also mentioned the government’s LNG project as attractive for
investors.
The Department of
Energy plans to develop the
domestic natural gas industry as it aims to transform the Philippines into an LNG
transshipment hub in the Asia-Pacific region. It is preparing the necessary
policies ahead of the expected depletion of indigenous natural gas supply from
Malampaya by 2024.
It said LNG has the
potential to cover the increasing demand of the Philippines, which it placed at
around 18,500 megawatts by 2040 based on the Philippine Energy Plan. It is also
looking at the potential of gas-fired power plants to complement the output
from renewable energy sources or replace diesel-fired plants in off-grid areas.
An official of one of
the world’s top managers of infrastructure funds described LNG as “prolific” as
a “healthy volume” exists in terms of buying and selling the resource, which is
described as the cleanest of all fossil fuels.
“LNG is the next
battleground,” the official who asked not to be named said. “I would even go so
far as to say that there is no need for the government to be involved.”
A banker, who asked not
to be identified, said the government could come in with the policy, but in
terms of money and development, the private sector should take over. The
interest in LNG comes in view of the diminishing appetite for coal, making
investors assess their way forward as it could affect their exit strategy, the
banker added.
For other
infrastructure projects, a number of bankers and investors said funding is not
a problem as liquidity remains available both locally and overseas.
“Money
is available on the debt side. There is so much liquidity in the system,” said
the banker, pointing to the country’s benign interest rate for the past several
years.
For the government
side, Karen G. Singson, undersecretary of the Department of Finance, told the
forum that because of the liquidity the government was looking at where private
sector financing has an advantage.
She made the comment
amid observations about the state’s preference towards funding projects through
official development assistance and traditional government procurement.
“That’s in developing
basically new projects that introduce new technology, new concept that would
deliver infrastructure at lower cost and quicker,” she said.
“These
are all innovations that the private sector should have an ability to deliver
in some ways better than the government because you don’t have any restrictions
from procurement, you have more flexible development teams,” she added.
She said the government
has announced that it is “very welcoming” to unsolicited proposals, which
allows the original proponent greater probability of bagging a project as it is
allowed to match an offer made by rivals.
The government is
looking at the proposed LNG facility as an unsolicited proposal.
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