Published By
Myrna M. Velasco
First Gen Corporation
conveyed that it is willing to go back to the negotiating table with state-run
Philippine National Oil Company (PNOC) on a “practicable cost proposition” on
its target to purchase the latter’s banked gas.
According to company
chairman Federico R. Lopez, “we are always open to talk,” and there is even
greater compelling reason for such after the PNOC management secured a mandate
from its board for it to negotiate for a price that will be lower than the
US$6.616 per gigajoule cost benchmark of the Ilijan gas plant.
First Gen had been the
most “avid bidder” in the last two auctions that the state-run firm had already
undertaken on its banked gas, an asset drawn to its charge via a
government-to-government transaction sealed under the Arroyo administration.
Even for PNOC, it has
that reciprocal belief that First Gen is the most likely buyer given its solid
gas-fired power fleets, but “a mutually acceptable cost” is a major item that
the relevant parties would need to agree on.
The aggregate selling
price that PNOC had crunched for its 97 petajoules of banked gas asset had been
at $600 million to US$650 million, but the final sale price shall depend on
what it could eventually corner in the negotiations with a willing buyer.
First Gen Board
Director Richard B. Tantoco noted that the banked gas could be utilized for
electricity generation at the company’s 414-megawatt San Gabriel power plant.
“It could be for San
Gabriel… instead of drawing from the existing agreement of the other plants,
can draw on this,” he said, referring to any portended off-take (purchase) deal
that the Lopez firm may eventually cement with the state-run company.
The banked gas, he
explained, could be an added fuel supply for the San Gabriel plant, instead of
just the ones tied up to the existing contracts of the Lopez group’s Santa Rita
and San Lorenzo gas plants.
Beyond that, Tantoco
emphasized that “this banked gas from PNOC will allow us to help government
burn stranded asset and then offer the much-needed relief to consumers.”
The San Gabriel plant
is now covered by a power supply agreement that had been underwritten by power
utility giant Manila Electric Company (Meralco); and had already secured also
the approval of the Energy Regulatory Commission.
The power plant, which
first came on stream latter part of 2016, had its capacity traded in the market
“on a merchant basis,” but the Meralco-underpinned PSA had been batted for so
the asset could lean on a more stable revenue stream.
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