Updated April 19, 2018, 4:17 PM By Myrna Velasco
Energy Secretary Alfonso G. Cusi
personally made his appeal to Manila Electric Company (Meralco) to subject its
controversial power supply agreements (PSAs) to a Swiss challenge, but he has
not gotten definitive commitment from the utility firm on this plea.
He said this was raised during a
discussion he had with Meralco Senior Vice President Rogelio L. Singson, who is
also the President of Meralco PowerGen Corporation, the giant distribution
firm’s power generation investment arm.
Cusi divulged that the response he
got from Singson was that, as an industry player, the utility firm would also
need to look at the competitive selection process (CSP) rules being enforced by
the Energy Regulatory Commission.
A ‘Swiss challenge’ is being
proposed on the PSAs of Meralco for these deals to finally have their legal tenability
tested and to really gauge if their proposed tariffs are cost-competitive
enough to the Filipino consumers.
Cusi said he is putting forward this
recommendation, so these supply deals could finally make their way out of the
controversies, especially so since these are also hounding the power projects
tied to them.
He noted that Swiss challenge could
be an acceptable option, because that also falls within the ambit of the CSP
policy being enforced on the supply procurement of distribution utilities.
“They can have that subjected to
Swiss challenge… whatever is a legal process, I’m not going to demand something
that is not legal,” the energy chief stressed. A Swiss challenge entails
matching the offer or tender of the original project proponent.
Cusi further emphasized that his
main concern would be “to make sure that it is affordable and fair to
everybody.”
The energy chief added “I’m not
against Meralco… it’s just a good process, and I want assurance of supply and
I’m looking at 2021, 2022 to 2030, we need to build up on investments,” Cusi
said.
At least two power plant projects of
Meralco PowerGen – the Subic and Atimonan coal-fired power projects, are now at
more advanced stages of implementation, but the firm cannot totally move with
construction phases yet because their PSAs are still gridlocked by regulatory
approval.
For the two-unit RP Energy
coal-fired power project at aggregate capacity of 600 megawatts, total
financing had been placed at P56 billion (or US$1.28 billion).
And on the company’s 1,200MW
Atimonan One Energy Inc. project in Quezon province, Singson previously
apprised media that cost estimate had already been re-adjusted to US$3.0
billion or more than P150 billion.
Singson previously indicated “this
(Atimonan project) to us is a very, very high priority because this is the
first 2x600MW ultra super critical plant in the country and this is a single
biggest investment at P153 billion, about $3.0 billion which means this can
significantly increase foreign investments.”
He qualified that in terms of
project approvals, “everything is in place – from financing, EPC (engineering,
procurement and construction), BOI (Board of Investments) approval, connection
agreement with the National Grid Corporation of the Philippines, LGU (local government
unit) support and we even have in place our O&M (operation and maintenance)
joint venture, what is missing is the PSA, unfortunately.”
Singson emphasized the proposed
Atimonan plant “is shovel ready,” adding that the company “continues to make
sure that the community is very supportive of this project.”
He further narrated “I personally
met with the Mayor and the bishop of Lucena just to get the full support and
we’re staking the reputation of the Meralco Group and the entire MVP group in
this project.”
On the project sponsor-firm’s
standpoint, “we want Atimonan to be a major model for recipient of project of
this scale, so we are banking on transforming the small, sleepy town of
Atimonan to be a major community after the project is completed,” Singson said.
At construction phase, the power
generation investment arm of Meralco would be targeting 3,000 to 4,000 workers
at the site, hence it is also making sure that “the community is ready for such
a scale of movement of workers.”
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