December 10, 2018 | 12:08 am By Victor V. Saulon Sub-Editor
MERALCO Powergen Corp.
(MGen) said the continuing delay in the approval of the power supply contract
for its Atimonan coal-fired power plant had jacked up the project’s cost by P15
billion.
“If my numbers are
correct, I think nasa mga (it’s at about) P15 billion, kasi
interest rate na lang (because even only the interest) on a loan of P107
[billion],” Rogelio L. Singson, MGen president and chief executive officer,
told reporters last week.
He said the reckoning
of the cost is from the filing of the power supply agreement (PSA) in 2016
until September or October this year.
Mr. Singson said even a
2% per annum increase in interest rate would result in raising the borrowing
cost for the project.
“Tapos meron ka pang (Then you also have)
escalation on EPC (engineering, procurement and construction),” he said,
referring to the contract with the builder of the facility.
The EPC contract had to
be re-valued after it lapsed because of the delay. A new contract meant costs
will go up under new terms.
Mr. Singson also cited
foreign exchange costs, which rose with the weakening of the peso against the
dollar.
Angelito U. Lantin,
Manila Electric Co. (Meralco) senior vice-president, previously said all of the
equipment for the project will be imported. He said when the power supply
contract was submitted for approval, a dollar costs only about P47. The peso
closed at P52.71 to the dollar on Dec. 7.
About a year ago,
Manila Electric Co. (Meralco) said its unit MGen had agreed with lenders the
terms of a P107.5-billion loan to fund about 70%-75% of its 1,200-megawatt (MW)
coal-fired power plant in Atimonan.
MGen is borrowing from
eight local banks in Philippine pesos. The company previously placed the
project’s cost at P135 billion.
Although there was a
lending agreement, MGen unit Atimonan One Energy, Inc. (A1E) could not draw
down on the loan amount until the PSA has been approved. The supply contract is
pending with the Energy Regulatory Commission (ERC).
Oppositors to the
project questioned the timing of filing of the PSA just before rules on
competitive selection process (CSP) took effect. The CSP allows challengers to
the electricity price forged under the PSA. A case questioning the contract had
been filed and is pending at the Supreme Court. The ERC previously said it
would await the court’s decision before acting on the PSA.
“I think we will wait
for the approval,” said Meralco President and Chief Executive Officer Oscar S.
Reyes when asked whether the group would opt to build the plant even without an
assured buyer of its power output.
“May oras pa ’yun (There is still
time),” he added.
MGen is leading the
development of three power plants — all coal-fired. A1E is building a two-unit
ultra supercritical coal-fired power plant, each with a capacity of 600 MW in
Atimonan.
Another subsidiary, San
Buenaventura Power Ltd. Co. (SBPL), is constructing a 455-MW facility in
Mauban, Quezon. It will be the country’s first supercritical coal-fired power
plant. The plant was targeted to be completed in mid-2019.
The third project, a
coal-fired power plant under Redondo Peninsula Energy, Inc., has two units,
each with a capacity of 300 MW using the circulating fluidized bed technology.
Of the three, only SBPL
secured project financing, through a P42.15-billion omnibus agreement for a
senior-term loan with several banks.
Meralco will be the
buyer of the Atimonan plant’s entire electrical output. Under a previous
schedule, testing and commissioning was expected in December 2020 for unit one,
and in May 2021 for unit two. Their respective commercial operation was set in
the fourth quarter of 2020 and the fourth quarter of 2025.
Mr. Reyes said the
plant is now targeted for completion by 2023, leaving MGen a shorter time to
build the power plant that is meant to respond to the expected rise of
electricity demand in the coming years.
Meralco’s controlling
stakeholder, Beacon Electric Asset Holdings, Inc., is partly owned by PLDT,
Inc. Hastings Holdings, Inc., a unit of PLDT Beneficial Trust Fund subsidiary
MediaQuest Holdings, Inc., has interest in BusinessWorld through the
Philippine Star Group, which it controls.
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