(The Philippine Star) | Updated November 1, 2017 - 12:00am
http://www.philstar.com/business/2017/11/01/1754324/malaya-plant-rebidding-awaits-natural-gas-policy
MANILA, Philippines —
The government is awaiting the issuance of the country’s natural gas policy
before it can re-bid the 650-megawatt (MW) Malaya Thermal Power Plant (TPP) in
Rizal, a ranking Department of Energy (DOE) official said.
DOE Undersecretary
Felix William Fuentebella said the Power Sector Assets and Liabilities
Management Corp. (PSALM) is waiting for the Philippine Natural Gas Regulation
(PNGR) for inclusion in the terms of reference for the privatization of the
Malaya plant.
“PSALM is waiting for
the policy because one of the conditions for Malaya is once natural gas is
available in the country, it should be converted into a gas-fired plant,” he
said.
The PNGR is the policy
framework that will guide the development of the natural gas industry in the
country in preparation for the depletion of indigenous natural gas supply from
Malampaya by 2024.
The policy has gone
through a series of public consultations and is expected to be finished by
end-October, Fuentebella said.
Earlier, the DOE said
the direction for the Malaya plant is to convert it from running on diesel fuel
to coal or liquefied natural gas (LNG) to become a baseload plant.
Baseload power plants
are power generating facilities that can operate reliably and efficiently
generating electricity 24 hours a day, seven days a week. This can be served by
coal, LNG and nuclear plants.
Another reason for the
conversion is that diesel will have additional burden in the form of taxes once
the Tax Reform for Acceleration and Inclusion (TRAIN) bill is passed into law,
Fuentebella said.
PSALM, the entity
created by the Electric Power Industry Reform Act (EPIRA) to privatize
government-owned assets, set the auction originally on March 8 this year. The
asset was to be sold on an “as is, where is” basis.
The sale had been reset
to March 30 and then deferred until further notice to take into consideration
the DOE policy to ensure sufficiency of the power supply in the Luzon grid.
Currently, the Malaya
TPP, which runs on diesel, was designated as a must-run unit (MRU) by the DOE
to address supply deficiency when operating power plants in the grid suddenly
bog down or become unavailable.
It will operate as an
MRU until the DOE finalizes its privatization schedule.
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