October 3, 2018 | 12:10 am By Victor V. Saulon, Sub-editor
THE Department of Energy (DoE) has
yet to receive an application from Limay LNG Power Corp. to build an integrated
liquefied natural gas (LNG) import facility, officials of the agency said on
Tuesday.
Energy Undersecretary Donato D.
Marcos said under DoE Department Circular 2017-11-0012 or the “Rules and
Regulations Governing the Philippine Downstream Natural Gas Industry” companies
that plan to build an LNG facility have to seek prior approval from the
department.
“Who would give them the notice to
proceed?” he said in an interview, adding that based on DoE records Limay LNG
Power had so far attended only a pre-application conference.
His comments came after reports said
Limay LNG had signed on foreign entities, including a unit of Anglo-Swiss
commodity trader Glencore PLC, as partners in the project either to handle
engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) or project financing.
“As far as we are concerned [Limay
LNG Power has] not officially applied to us,” said Rino E. Abad, director of
the DoE’s oil industry management bureau.
He said even if the company was
building the project for its own use, that is to power its power plant, the DoE
circular requires LNG project developers to always stay open to open its
facility for third-party access.
“If your capacity initially is only
equivalent to your own use how can you offer a service to other parties kung
wala ka naman (if you don’t have) excess capacity,” he said.
Mr. Abad said Glencore had held a
meeting with the DoE but not on a project related to LNG. He said the foreign
company could either be the provider of the technology, or the EPC contractor.
Glenda G. Martinez, PNOC senior
vice-president for management services, said for now the discussions with Limay
LNG Power is confined to the rental of a 12-hectare property owned by the
agency in Limay, Bataan as the possible site of its project.
“As of now, rental pa lang muna
ang pinag-uusapan kasi wala pa silang business proposal na binibigay
for us to evaluate (As of now, the discussion is about rental because they have
not yet submitted a business proposal for us to evaluate),” she said in an
interview.
Aside from Limay LNG Energy Power,
Ms. Martinez said PNOC had been in talks with other entities that are keen on
renting the property but no agreement had been closed yet. She said the company
was keen on a bigger contiguous area covering a total of 50 hectares.
“We are open to whoever will give us
a good deal,” she said when asked about a possible partnership with Limay LNG
Power.
Based on records from the DoE, Limay
LNG Power plans to build a 1,100 megawatt (MW) combined cycle gas turbine
project in the area. It has been cleared in July 2018 to conduct a grid impact
study, one of the processes required in any power generation project.
The project is in the DoE’s list of
“indicative” projects or those that have yet to close a financing contract as
well as secure the relevant regulatory permits. Most indicative projects have
yet to schedule their target testing and commissioning dates as well as their
target commercial operation date.
Sought for comment, Energy Secretary
Alfonso G. Cusi told reporters that he would endorse the first LNG integrated
facility cleared by his department for inclusion in the list of energy projects
of national significance (EPNS). He said his stance is in preparation for a
possible shortfall in power supply in 2021 to 2022.
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