By Lenie Lectura - February 8, 2019
AC Energy Inc. is closely reviewing
plans on the Malaya Thermal Power Plant which is being sold by the Power
Sector Assets and Liabilities Management Corp. (PSALM).
“Malaya is right beside our Pililla
plant so we view that as a possible peaking facility. The good thing about that
is access to transmission…We will not do a coal plant there, gas will be
more challenging, so it’s going to be more on peaking,” AC Energy President
Eric Francia said.
AC Energy and Phinma Energy Corp.
expressed interest in the plant. The two are currently working on a
deal that will give AC Energy a 51.48-percent stake in Phinma Energy valued at
P3.42 billion.
Francia said if and when they pursue
interest in the Malaya plant, “it’s not going to be an easy project,”
because the plant is very old.
“While it makes sense to replace the
whole thing, it will be very costly to rehabilitate. It’s got an expensive
start-up cost,” Francia said.
All of these, he said, would be
taken into consideration. “It’s good we have an extension for us to conduct
studies.”
In December last year, PSALM said it
has prequalified four firms vying to buy the Malaya plant, the land underlying
the facility and all other assets associated with the plant’s structures.
PSALM President Irene Joy Garcia
identified AC Energy Inc., DM Wenceslao & Associates Inc., DMCI Power
Corp. and FGen Reliable Energy Holdings Inc. as “real serious bidders.”
The other interested bidders who
earlier expressed interest, but did not submit the necessary documents are
Panasia Energy Inc., Quezon Power (Philippines) Ltd. Co., Crown Investment Holdings
Inc., Energy World Power Operations Philippines Inc., Pan Pacific
Renewable Power Philippines Corp., Phinma Energy Corp., Korean firm STX and SMC
Global Holdings Corp.
The plant, which consists of a
300-megawatt unit with a once-through type boiler and a 350-MW unit fitted with
a conventional boiler, is a must-run unit (MRU) that provides backup power in
instances when supply is deficient or unavailable in the Luzon grid.
The PSALM board recently allowed the
privatization of the Malaya complex without the MRU requirement.
AC Energy was earlier looking to
develop a 150-MW diesel plant in Pililla, Rizal, to serve the peaking
requirement of the Luzon grid. Francia said the company is currently working on
the permitting process.
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