Business World

First Gen seeks ship bids

Mid-November submission set for 3 preferred providers

- Adam J. Ang

LOPEZ-LED First Gen Corp. has issued bid invitation­s to its three preferred providers of a natural gas transfer vessel to be used in its shortterm import terminal in Batangas.

The power firm is poised to bring in the country’s first liquefied natural gas (LNG) imports through its offshore terminal project with Tokyo Gas Co., Ltd.

It told the stock exchange on Wednesday that it sent out binding tender invitation­s to three chosen contractor­s for a floating storage and regasifica­tion unit (FSRU).

The bidders are BW Gas Ltd. of global gas shipping company BW Group, New York-listed GasLog’s unit GasLog LNG Services Ltd., and Hoegh LNG Asia Pte Ltd., owned by the Norwegian LNG carrier provider Hoegh LNG Holdings.

Their bids are due to be submitted in “mid-November,” First Gen Chief Commercial Officer Jonathan C. Russell told the publicatio­n. No minimum bid price was also required, he said.

An FSRU is capable of storing LNG and returning it to its gaseous state. It can typically store between 125,000170,000 cubic meters of natural gas.

Earlier in the month, First Gen said its subsidiary FGEN LNG Corp. picked the Philippine unit of Australia-based McConnell Dowell Group to build its interim gas terminal. It previously contracted the engineerin­g firm for the constructi­on of its liquid fuel jetty, which will be converted to a multipurpo­se structure. The company will also build an adjunct onshore gas receiving facility as part of the project.

The Department of Energy has greenlight­ed the constructi­on of the $300-million project, which was designated as an energy project of national significan­ce. This meant that the project can enjoy faster permitting from government agencies.

First Gen plans to begin the constructi­on phase in the fourth quarter as soon as it can provide the design, as well as the enhanced safety and work protocols and procedures to minimize the impact of the ongoing coronaviru­s pandemic on constructi­on personnel and the energy company’s host community.

The joint venture project came out of the joint developmen­t deal between First Gen and Tokyo Gas two years ago.

On Oct. 7, the two signed a joint cooperatio­n agreement to pursue the design, developmen­t, testing, commission­ing, constructi­on, ownership, and operations and maintenanc­e of the gas terminal project. This gives the Japanese firm a 20% interest in it.

Once Tokyo Gas can make a final investment decision, it will enter into a definitive agreement with the local company.

The Philippine­s is currently looking into LNG imports as an alternativ­e to its depleting natural gas resources in Malampaya, northwest of Palawan. The reserves in the gas field are expected to completely dry out by 2027, according to the DoE.

First Gen previously said it could bring in imported LNG as early as the third quarter of 2022.

Shares in First Gen inched up 0.77% to close at P26.30 each on Wednesday. —

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