By Lenie Lectura - March 4, 2018
THE Department of Energy
(DoE) has received four proposals from local and foreign firms that are
interested to put up an integrated liquefied natural gas (LNG) facility in the
country, following the issuance of the downstream natural gas industry policy.
DOE Assistant Secretary Leonido Pulido
said Tokyo Gas, China National Offshore Oil Co., First Gen Corp. and Cleanway
Technology Corp. have recently submitted letters of interest.
“They are interested to put up an
integrated LNG facility that includes storage, regasification [a process of converting
LNG at-162 ° Celsius temperature back to natural gas at atmospheric
temperature] and distribution,” Pulido said. “They submitted letters of
interests and request for preliminary conference. After that, it’s
when you are supposed to submit a formal application.”
The four firms’ interest were stoked
after the DOE issued Department Circular 2017-11-0012, or the “Rules and
Regulations Governing the Philippine Downstream Natural Gas Industry.”
Stakeholders have waited for the
issuance of a gas policy to guide them in pursuing this capital-intensive
project.
“Essentially, it allows rules that
would determine who among several stakeholders can have the authority to put up
the LNG integrated facility. Under this, our government corporations will just
be one of several competitors to make it more efficient and make the system
more orderly,” Pulido said.
The letters of interests were
submitted to the DOE. Pulido said these proposals are separate from what the
companies have also submitted to the Philippine National Oil Co. (PNOC), which
intends to put up a $2-billion LNG terminal.
Earlier, the PNOC said it received
offers from First Gen Corp., Energy World Corp., PT Jaya Samudra Karunia, PT
PGN LNG Indonesia/PT Bosowa Corporindo with local partner MOF Corp., Korea
Electric Power Corp., Lloyds Energy Group and CNOOC. It was not clear how the
DOE would go about with the proposals it has received when another state firm
has also received offers for the same project.
“Yes, this is different. Nothing is
written in stone,” Pulido said. “Whoever can suggest the best petition that can
address our need in ensuring continued supply.”
But under the policy, PNOC or
its unit PNOC Exploration Corp. (PNOC-EC) may acquire at least a 10-percent
stake in the LNG project.
“We have complied with all the
policy regulations, it’s up to them [PNOC] to find a partner,” Energy Secretary
Alfonso G. Cusi said during the signing of the LNG policy, adding that PNOC is
still choosing a partner.
Pulido said that, based on the
rules, the LNG terminal’s power plant component can be 100-percent owned by
foreigners, although the public utility component is subject to the
constitutional limitation of 40-percent foreign ownership.
Under the rules, excess capacity of
the LNG terminal, transmission system, distribution system and other services
offered by the operator should be made available on a transparent and
nondiscriminatory basis to third-party users.
Pulido said the DOE natural gas
evaluation committee will decide which proposal.
“The policy does not allow the DOE
to say that there’s only one investor that should be designated in one area,”
he explained. “But we are studying whether if we should do that.”
The LNG project should be
completed before the expected depletion of the Malampaya offshore-gas find near
Palawan island in 2024.
LNG is natural gas that has been
converted into a liquid state for easier storage and transportation. Upon
reaching its destination, LNG is regasified so it can be distributed through
pipelines as natural gas.
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 megawatts of power plant capacity is dependent on the country’s sole
natural gas source.
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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