Published
October 29, 2017, 10:00 PM By
Myrna M. Velasco
Power utility giant
Manila Electric Company (Meralco) has inked “mandate letters” with seven
Philippine banks for the P107 billion worth of loan facility that it will be
securing for the 1,200-megawatt Atimonan One Energy ultra super critical
coal-fired power project in Quezon province.
“We recently signed
mandate letters with a group of seven Philippine banks for P107-billion debt
financing for (the Atimonan) project. Easily, this will be the biggest project
finance deal done locally,” Angelito U. Lantin, senior vice president of
Meralco PowerGen (MGen) has disclosed in a briefing with reporters.
A “mandate letter” sets
out the terms of a loan being procured for a project and it also manifests the
intent of the banks’ readiness to lend money to the borrower.
Lantin has qualified
though that financial closing will be firmed up yet after securing the approval
of the Energy Regulatory Commission (ERC) on the project’s power supply
agreement (PSA). The identities of the lender-banks will also be revealed at
the closing of the deal.
“One of the features of
our projects at MGen is we are able to accept peso-denominated capacity fees to
help Meralco do away with forex (foreign exchange) risks, so we tried to
finance all our projects using Philippine debt financing,” he explained.
Meralco Chief Finance
Officer Betty Siy-Yap also noted that the utility firm already prepaid about
R2.5-billion loan so they can have borrowing leverage for the Atimonan power
venture.
She expounded that
while the facility is still due in February 2018, they had to make the
prepayment so they can be steered clear of the single borrower’s limit (SBL)
set by the banks.
Other preparatory works
being advanced by MGen for the Atimonan project are the continued evaluation
and negotiations for the engineering, procurement and construction (EPC)
contract for the project; as well as the signing of a memorandum of
understanding with MIESCOR for the construction of the transmission line that
will underpin the capacity wheeling of generated electricity from the plant.
“We still expect
completion of the first unit, 600MW by end of 2021,” Lantin said, while noting
that the company is also “constructing a 1.6-kilometer access road for easier
site access and this is expected to be completed by the end of this year.”
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