Published May 4, 2019, 10:00 PM By Myrna M.
Velasco
Consunji-owned firm SEM Calaca Power
Corporation (SCPC) has engaged a consortium of foreign firms as technical
consultant for its 600-megawatt coal fired power plant in Batangas.
In a disclosure to the Philippine
Stock Exchange (PSE), the company noted that it sealed14-month contract with
Toshiba Energy Systems & Solutions Corporation (Toshiba ESS) and Kansai
Electric Power Co., Inc. of Kansai, Japan for the consultancy work.
“Toshiba ESS and Kansai will look
into and provide technical services to the two power plants of SCPC,” the
company has noted. The Consunji firm has not given details on the full work
coverage of the consultancy engagement.
Further, the Japanse consultants are
required to “propose technical solutions to improve the availability,
operations and maintenance of the said facilities.”
It has to be noted that the Calaca
coal plant has been among those recurrently experiencing mechanical glitches
that have been affecting its operations and supply of electricity to consumers.
As noted by Semirara Mining and
Power Corporation President and Chief Operating Officer Maria Cristina C. Gotianun,
they are banking on the help of the newly-tapped consultants to improve the
operating efficiency of the Calaca generating units.
“Drawing on years of expertise in
developing and manufacturing power generation equipment, our new partners can
provide services that shall improve the value of our power plants,” Gotianun
said.
The Calaca plant is considered a
vertically integrated asset of the Consunji group because it draws its fuel
supply from the Semirara mine, which is also owned by the conglomerate.
Nevertheless, given the extent of
its operations that already traversed several decades, the generating facility
had also grown vulnerable to technical breakdowns, hence, it might need
technical propping up so its life cycle can be extended.
In fact, the Calaca plant was among
those thrown into the spotlight in the simultaneous forced outages of power
plants that had been pushing the Luzon grid to breaking point during the summer
months.
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