posted February 25, 2019
at 08:45 pm by Alena Mae S. Flores
A
500-megawatt coal-fired power plant in Quezon province is set to start
operations in the fourth quarter this year, augmenting electricity supply in
the Luzon grid.
San
Buenaventura Power Ltd. Co., the owner and operator of the plant in Mauban,
Quezon, said the construction of the facility was more than 97-percent
completed.
SBPL
is a joint venture of Meralco PowerGen Corp., the power generation arm of the
Manila Electric Co., and New Growth BV, a wholly-owned subsidiary of
Electricity Generating Public Co. Limited of Thailand.
“The
construction of the project has progressed 97.38 percent. The commercial
operation date is scheduled in the fourth quarter of 2019,” Egco said in a
report.
SBPL
contracted 455 MW of the plant’s capacity to Meralco pursuant to a 20-year
power supply agreement which can be extended for another five years.
Meralco
PowerGen president Rogelio Singson confirmed that the SBPL project would go
online in the final quarter of 2019.
“Yes,
correct end of September,” Singson said when asked to comment.
SBPL
tapped Daelim Industrial Co. Ltd. and Mitsubishi Corp. as its
engineering, procurement and construction contractor for the project.
Singson
said the project initially encountered technical difficulties because there is
an existing power plant of Quezon Power Philippines Ltd. in the Mauban site
which meant that certain structures needed to be avoided.
“It
was quite a challenge and we acknowledge it was a very difficult situation,” he
said.
Singson
said SBPL was in discussions with Daelim to resolve the issues related to the
plant “to make sure we complete the project as soon as possible.”
The
groundbreaking ceremony for the project was held in December 2015 which
signaled the start of construction of the power facility to provide the
baseload supply needed to serve electricity consumers in Luzon.
“The
SBPL plant will be one of the first facilities in the Philippines to utilize
the supercritical boiler technology leading to higher efficiency and
significant reductions in carbon dioxide emissions in comparison to traditional
boiler technology,” Egco president Chanin Chaonirattisai said earlier.
The
San Buenaventura power plant is seen to play a crucial role as electricity
demand grows, especially in Luzon which accounts for about 70 percent of the
country’s gross domestic product.
The
project is also aligned with Meralco PowerGen’s goal to have a power generation
portfolio of about 3,000 MW.
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