By
Lenie Lectura- January 4, 2018
A total of
seven foreign firms have submitted unsolicited proposals to the Philippine
National Oil Co. (PNOC) for a joint-venture partnership to build an ambitious
liquefied natural gas (LNG) terminal in the country.
PNOC Spokesman Ryan
Tanjuatco said the proposals came from Kepco, Lloyds Energy, China
National Offshore Oil Co., First Gen Corp., Energy World Corp., PT. Jaya
Samudra Karunia and PT PGN LNG Indonesia/PT Bosowa Corporindo with their local
partner MOF Corp.
However, Kepco’s
proposal did not comply with the requirements of an unsolicited proposal,
Tanjuatco said. “It was sent back, but Kepco did not resubmit.”
Lloyds Energy’s proposal
was also returned. However, it submitted a revised proposal. “Llyod Energy
resubmitted ahead of the other proponents and their proposal is the one being
currently evaluated,” Tanjuatco said.
In all, the PNOC has
received six unsolicited proposals to date. The financial and technical
proposals of the interested groups would be forwarded to PNOC’s consultant for
evaluation, according to Tanjuatco.
The state firm was
earlier eyeing to tap the Asian Development Bank as consultant for the LNG
project.
Wave, glut
CITING Sanford C.
Bernstein & Co., Bloomberg said the LNG industry needs to start planning
for shortages even as analysts project a glut starting next year.
The next wave of LNG
projects is set to begin as early as this year, Bernstein analysts, including
Neil Beveridge, said in a report last Thursday. That’s a more aggressive
timetable than the firm made in September, when it said investment decisions
for the next group of plants wouldn’t come until 2019.
Energy companies will
approve investments for more than 150 million tons a year of new supply
capacity over the next four years, according to the report. By comparison,
global consumption was 286 million tons in 2017. Projects in Qatar, Papua New
Guinea, Russia and the United States are most economically appealing, followed
by Mozambique, Australian expansion projects and an Alaskan mega-project,
Bernstein said. Demand grew by about 10 percent last year, led by emerging
markets and especially China, where coal-to-gas switching policies have the country
on track to surpass Japan as the world’s biggest LNG importer by 2030,
Beveridge said. New projects coming online over the next few years will result
in excess production capacity of as much as 54 million tons in 2020, but the
market will remain tight in winter when demand increases.
Malampaya issue
THE PNOC was earlier
tasked by the Department of Energy (DOE) to develop an integrated-LNG hub with
storage, liquefaction, re-gassification and distribution facility, as well as a
reserve initial power-plant capacity of 200 megawatts (MW).
LNG is natural gas that
has been converted into a liquid state for easier storage and transportation.
Upon reaching its destination, LNG is regassified so it can be distributed
through pipelines as natural gas.
Energy Secretary
Alfonso G. Cusi said the government is aiming to turn the Philippines into a
hub for LNG, amid a depletion of natural gas from the Malampaya gas field in
Palawan in less than a decade. Currently, around 3,500 MW of power-plant
capacity is dependent on the country’s sole natural gas source.
“We’ve started with the
rollout of the Batangas LNG terminal by 2020 to safeguard against the
anticipated depletion of the Malampaya gas facility in 2024,” Cusi earlier
said.
Other areas being
considered for LNG hub, Cusi said, are “many areas in Mindanao and in Subic.”
The DOE has scheduled
the groundbreaking for the country’s first LNG hub in 2018, with project
completion still being eyed within the six-year term of President Duterte.
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