posted January 13, 2019 at 08:50 pm by Alena Mae S. Flores
Redondo Peninsula Energy Inc. put on
hold the development of a 660-megawatt coal-fired power project in Redondo Peninsula,
Subic, Zambales because of construction and power supply agreement issues, a
top executive said over the weekend.
RP Energy is a joint venture among
Meralco PowerGen Corp., Therma Power Inc. of the Aboitiz Group and Taiwan
Cogeneration International Corp.
“RP Energy issued a limited notice
to proceed to the EPC [engineering, procurement and construction], but we
discovered we had problems with the slope, with the site and to mitigate, to
fix the site, would require the site to be stable. The board decided to hold
development and with that the limited notice to proceed was also cancelled on
the EPC,” Aboitiz Power chief operating officer Manny Rubio said.
“This was before. Now, we are
looking for alternatives, and based on the decision, we will make a decision
should we actually proceed. Again, conditional to the condition of the site.
It’s a construction issue, something that was not foreseen by RP Energy,” Rubio
said.
Rubio said the technical problem
involved “instability in one of the slopes” which needed to be addressed.
“We really have to find a
solution on that one. At the moment, it’s Meralco looking at a way to manage
the movement. A number of [technologies are available], but given that the
contracts are actually pending in court, I think we will make a decision also
once we have clarity on the decision on the contract,” he said.
RP Energy earlier tapped Doosan
Heavy Industries & Construction Co., Ltd. as its EPC contractor.
RP Energy signed a power service
agreement with Meralco for a contracted capacity of 225 MW within a 20-year
term on April 20, 2016. The PSA was filed for approval with the Energy
Regulatory Commission on April 29, 2016.
Public hearings were subsequently
held and were concluded on Jan. 6, 2017, but the application was still pending
with the ERC.
RP Energy and Meralco agreed to
extend the date of the PSA for a period of 12 months or from April 29, 2018 to
April 29, 2019.
“If the ERC does not approve the PSA
by April 29, 2019, RP Energy would then have the option to terminate the PSA.
To date, RP Energy is still awaiting the ERC’s approval of its PSA,”
Aboitiz Power said in a previous disclosure to the stock exchange.
RP Energy’s construction was
previously delayed by the issuance of a writ of Kalikasan against the project,
which has since been resolved.
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