Business World

Semirara Mining and Power net income falls 30% to P27.9 billion

- Sheldeen Joy Talavera

WEAK COAL and power selling price pulled down the consolidat­ed net income of Semirara Mining and Power Corp. (SMPC) by 30% to P27.9 billion in 2023, the company said on Wednesday.

“Last year, we expected energy prices to stabilize so we focused on boosting our mine and plant outputs. Our people played a crucial role in helping us manage the challenges of a fluctuatin­g energy market,” SMPC President and Chief Operating Officer Maria Cristina C. Gotianun said in a statement.

The company’s consolidat­ed revenues dropped by 16% to P76.96 billion last year due to lower selling prices for coal and electricit­y. This decline was softened by higher coal shipments and electricit­y sales, according to the company.

The average selling price of Semirara coal declined by 26% to P3,796 “as index prices retreated due to an oversupply from Indonesia, a warm winter and subdued global economic growth.”

Coal sales volume increased by 7% to 15.8 million metric tons (MT) thanks to a 14% increase in exports, totaling 8.1 million MT.

On its power segment, SMPC subsidiari­es SEM-Calaca Power Corp. and Southwest Luzon Power Generation Corp. recorded a combined electricit­y sales of 4,515 gigawatt-hours (GWh), higher by 26% a year earlier.

The average selling price of electricit­y, however, fell by 5% to P5.40 “on the combined impact of higher demand, entry of new capacity and interconne­ction of the Visayas and Mindanao grid.”

For the fourth quarter alone, SMPC reported a consolidat­ed net income of P5.3 billion, up 36% due to higher coal shipments.

Coal sales volume increased by 77% in three months to December to 5.3 million MT, as exports more than tripled to 3.5 million MT.

“During the same period, [average selling price] of Semirara coal declined by 32% from P4,861 to P3,305 due to correcting market prices,” SMPC said.

Meanwhile, the company registered a 32% increase in electricit­y sales during the last quarter as spot sales more than doubled to 731 GWh on higher gross generation and reduced bilateral contracts.

In contrast, its prices declined by 27% to P4.29 per kilowatt-hour due to “ample supply margins” and “receding fuel costs.”

Shares of the company on Wednesday went down by two centavos or 0.48% to close at P4.18 each. —

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