Published October 20, 2018, 10:00 PM
By Myrna M.
Velasco
At least six companies have
signified initial interest to bid for the 650-megawatt (MW) Malaya thermal
power plant that has been lined up by asset seller Power Sector Assets and
Liabilities Management Corporation (PSALM) for auction before the end of this
year.
The state-run company has not
identified the interested bidders at this point – but it is raising hopes that
they will advance to the actual submission of offers as slated on December 14.
PSALM held its pre-bid conference on
October 17 on the privatization of the thermal power facility, primarily to
gauge investors’ take on their preferred package on the asset’s divestment.
“As of the date of the conference,
six entities have signified to PSALM their intention to bid,” the
government-run firm said.
With the company finally advancing
Malaya plant’s sale to the private sector, it asserted that “the transition to
private ownership will be a win-win venture for both the government and the
winning bidder.”
The state-run company has somehow
relaxed the asset’s privatization terms – that its shift to gas fuel is no
longer a precondition; as well as the initial requirement for it to be aligned
as must-run unit (MRU) for at least three years.
As MRU facility, the Malaya plant
had been set as a stand-by generating asset that the system operator can call
for dispatch instantly when the power grid suffers from supply deficiency.
That has been a function served by
the Malaya plant for several years – especially at the time when Luzon grid had
to brace through supply shortages – chiefly in the years from 2014 to 2016.
With capacity additions in the last
two years, the grid had relatively been on a better position already, hence,
the government opted to finally decide on Malaya plant’s divestment.
When it was lined up in the
privatization block last year, four companies were being counted upon as
serious bidders – but when the sale package changed on the proposal of the
Department of Energy (DOE) then, most of them backtracked on their interest to
join the bidding.
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