Published
By Myrna M. Velasco
After two years of
flip-flopping, go-signal was finally given to the Power Sector Assets and
Liabilities Management Corporation (PSALM) to resume privatization process for
the 650-megawatt Malaya thermal power facility – and it will come without the
previously planned technology shift for the asset.
“Before the end of
2018, the privatization of the Malaya thermal power plant shall commence,”
asset-seller firm PSALM has noted in a statement to the media.
As gathered, the
approval from its Board no longer requires the earlier proposed fuel shift of
the plant from oil to gas. “Basically, it will be back to the original privatization
plan,” government sources said.
It must be recalled
that the Department of Energy (DOE) sought for the deferment of the plant’s
bidding in 2016 because it had been opting then for Malaya plant’s conversion
into a gas-fired power facility.
But after two years, it
was noted that the final proposal will be to divest the asset and PSALM will
just leave to the discretion of the winning bidder if it wants to re-configure
the facility to a gas plant or not.
Back in 2016, at least
four companies have prequalified to bid for the Malaya thermal asset – and it
remains to be seen if it will entice the same level of interest this time or
investors’ appetite may have already dwindled.
Aside from the Malaya
plant, PSALM indicated that it will also advance this year on the sale of other
assets – including real estate properties of the National Power Corporation.
This month, it emphasized that it will commence divestment process for underlying lands that had been the site of the Manila thermal power plant.
This month, it emphasized that it will commence divestment process for underlying lands that had been the site of the Manila thermal power plant.
“PSALM is entirely
committed to fulfilling its mandate of privatizing its remaining assets,” the
state-run firm stressed, adding that recent accomplishments on this sphere
include the sale of Power Barge 104 and the decommissioned Sucat thermal
facility.
At the same time, the
company was able to divest more than 900 hectares of real estate assets – that
essentially shored up its privatization proceeds.
“It is not true that
PSALM is not privatizing its assets. PSALM has already generated privatization
proceeds from assets amounting to P918.50 billion,” the company said.
PSALM President Irene
Joy B. Garcia similarly conveyed that the company “adheres to full
transparency,” and that its records show that the privatization proceeds “are
still utilized to pay its financial obligations.”
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