BusinessMirror

KEPCO: Several firms keen on coal power assets in PHL

- By Lenie Lectura @llectura

KOREA electric Power Corp. (KEPCO) said Monday it is selling its coal power assets in the Philippine­s as it moves to restructur­e its overseas business.

The South Korean state-owned power firm said it is in the second round of the sale process of its two non-core energy assets in Cebu.

KEPCO is selling its 60-percent stake in a thermal power plant in Cebu, KEPCO SPC Power Corp. (KSPC), and its 40-percent stake in SPC Power Corp. (SPC). It has appointed Samil PWC as its financial advisor for the sale.

There are several domestic and foreign bidders that expressed “high interest” in the assets and subsequent­ly submitted preliminar­y bids. Shortliste­d bidders, who are invited to the second round, are expected to submit final offers by the first quarter this year. The company declined to identify them.

“KEPCO intends to enter into an agreement within the first half of this year. The shortliste­d bidders are currently undergoing due diligence and site visits. As the marketing process drew more than the expected interests, the potential sale process has gained further traction towards a successful closing,” the company said in a statement.

KEPCO’S Cebu plant’s Circulatin­g Fluidized Bed Combustion (CFBC) technology, regarded as the environmen­tally optimized combustion process among coalfired power plants, is considered as the key factor for the interest from the investors’ perspectiv­e. Despite the worldwide environmen­tal, social and governance (ESG) movement, KEPCO said electricit­y demands and reliance on coal, as power source, allowed for competitiv­e bids.

KSPC, a joint venture between KEPCO Philippine­s holdings Inc. (KPHI) and SPC, owns and operates a 200MW circulatin­g fluidized bed (CFB) coal-fired power plant in Naga, Cebu. Since its operation in 2011, the plant has been supplying stable and efficient power to the Visayas region. Additional­ly, KPHI also directly owns a 37.96 percent stake in SPC.

It, however, clarified that it will retain its solar power investment in the Philippine­s. The company has existing investment in Solar Philippine­s Calatagan Corp. and is looking to invest more in renewable energy projects in the country.

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