Published
By Myrna M. Velasco
With the untimely
demise of Victor A. Consunji last month, the power generation and coal mining
business units of the Consunji group is now headed by Maria Cristina
Consunji-Gotianun.
Consunji-Gotianun,
married to EastWest Banking Corp. Chairman Jonathan Gotianun, has been serving
as executive vice president of Semirara Mining and Power Corporation (SMPC),
the integrated power generation and mining business segments of the Consunjis,
prior to her new appointment.
Aside from her new
designation at SMPC, Consunji-Gotianun has likewise been appointed as
officer-in-charge (OIC) to various SMPC subsidiaries – namely, the SEM-Calaca
Power Corporation (SCPC) and Southwest Luzon Power Generation Corporation
(SLPGC).
The SEM-Calaca power
facility was acquired by Consunji group from the Power Sector Assets and
Liabilities Management Corporation – which it had rehabilitated since then so
it can shore up its electricity generation efficiency.
The company’s other power plant, the 300MW SLPGC, serves as an expansion
capacity that is sited close to its Calaca power generating asset.
The Consunji group, in
a tie-up venture with the power generation unit of Manila Electric Company
(Meralco) is also pushing for the construction of another 750MW coal-fired
power project in Batangas via corporate vehicle Saint Raphael Power Generation
Corporation.
That particular power
project’s implementation, however, has been stalled due to delays in the
regulatory approval of its power supply agreement.
Beyond the on-grid
power assets of the Consunjis, the conglomerate is also pursuing various power
projects at off-grid areas via its subsidiary DMCI Power Corporation.
On the coal mining segment,
the conglomerate has reported a slowdown in sales by 10 percent in the last
quarter of financial reporting – that had been on account of the 35 percent
drop in production that it had within the period.
The company emphasized that its coal output had dipped to 1.7 million metric
tons within July-September 2018 compared to the heftier production of 2.6
million metric tons in the same period in 2017.
The Consunji firm
explained that “continuous heavy rains in July and August resulted in slippery
roads and made working area unsafe, hampering access to coal.”
Overall sales, however,
were still rosier if compared to the scale of drop in output – as the sales
decline had just been 10 percent to 8.9 million metric tons as against 9.9
million MT a year prior.
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