Updated
May 11, 2018, 10:46 PM By Myrna M. Velasco
https://business.mb.com.ph/2018/05/11/psalm-declares-shell-phoenix-petroleum-as-fuel-supply-winners/
State-run Power Sector
Assets and Liabilities Management Corporation (PSALM) has formally declared
Phoenix Petroleum Philippines, Inc. and Pilipinas Shell Petroleum Corporation
as winning bidders in the R2.28-billion fuel procurements for the Malaya thermal
and Ilijan gas-fired power plants.
These two oil firms
submitted the ‘lowest bids’ in a tendering process carried out by PSALM last
month on these specified fuel contracts. They were subsequently served ‘notices
of award’ on the mandated fuel deliveries.
“Shell and Phoenix
passed the post-qualification process that PSALM conducted that determined the
existence, authenticity and sufficiency of the eligibility and technical
documents they submitted,” the government-owned firm said.
Phoenix Petroleum won
the bids the diesel and industrial fuel oil requirements of Malaya plant; while
Shell cornered the fuel supply deal for the Ilijan plant.
For diesel oil that
will be delivered to the Malaya plant, the winning tender submitted by Phoenix
Petroleum was at R47.701 million, comparatively lower than the R51.2 million
approved budget cost set by PSALM for the fuel purchase.
The Uy-led oil company
had narrowly beaten other bidders like Petron Corporation, Pilipinas Shell,
Seaoil Philippines and Petrotrade Philippines, Inc. The contract entails
delivery of 1.4 million liters of diesel fuel to the Malaya plant.
On contract for the
supply and delivery of 42 million liters of industrial fuel oil to the Malaya
thermal facility, Phoenix Petroleum similarly had the lowest offer of R1.138
billion; vis-à-vis the bids of Shell, Petrotrade and SL Harbor Bulk Terminal
Corporation. That bid cost was manifestly lower than PSALM’s approved budget
cost of R1.186 billion for that specific fuel procurement.
For the Ilijan plant,
Shell’s winning tender was at R961.164 million against Phoenix Petroleum’s bid
of R982.384 million.
The approved budget
cost for this purchase had been pegged at R1.042 billion for 30 million liters
of diesel oil.
Scheduled deliveries of
the procured fuel to the electric generating facilities will be for calendar
year 2018, according to the bidding terms of reference set out by PSALM.
The state-run company
assumes fuel risk for the Ilijan plant which is still under a
build-operate-transfer (BOT) contract with Korea Electric Power Corporation and
its capacity under independent power producer administrator (IPPA) arrangement
with South Premiere Power Corporation of the San Miguel group. On the other,
PSALM takes full responsibility over the Malaya plant as this asset remains
under its ownership.
The Ilijan plant
generally runs on gas as its fuel for electricity generation, but it often
shifts to diesel either at start-up phase of its operations following a
downtime schedule; or when the Malampaya gas production facility goes on
maintenance shutdown.
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