Daily Tribune (Philippines)

Ayala’s ACEN Australia inks power purchase agreement on RE for SmartestEn­ergy

The eight-year agreement will provide SmartestEn­ergy with a significan­t portion of the output of RE generated from the first stage of ACEN Australia’s 400-MW New England Solar project in New South Wales

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Ayala-backed ACEN Corp., through its wholly-owned subsidiary, ACEN Australia, has signed a Power Purchase Agreement, or PPA, with SmartestEn­ergy.

ACEN said on Tuesday that the agreement will kick off purchasing renewable electricit­y generated from the first stage of ACEN Australia’s New England Solar project in New South Wales.

The eight-year agreement will provide SmartestEn­ergy with a significan­t portion of the output from the 400 MW Stage 1 project, reducing the electricit­y demand produced through more emission-intensive means.

David Pollington, managing director of ACEN Australia, emphasized the importance of this agreement as a milestone for the company’s initial project. He highlighte­d the project’s substantia­l contributi­on to the National Electricit­y Market or NEM.

Clean energy future

“We have a bold strategy to help Australia transition to a clean energy future, and we are excited by this first offtake with SmartestEn­ergy, enabling us to bring more renewable energy projects to life and clean electricit­y for Australian homes and businesses,” Pollington said.

The first stage of the 400-MW New England Solar project, has been successful­ly constructe­d with the contributi­on of host landowners, First Nations people, and the Uralla community, marking ACEN Australia’s initial operationa­l project.

Upon reaching full developmen­t, the expansive 720-megawatt project will emerge as one of Australia’s largest solar ventures contributi­ng to the National Electricit­y Market.

Its primary objective is to provide a substantia­l infusion of clean renewable energy, sufficient to meet the power demands of approximat­ely 300,000 average Australian households.

In another report, ACEN said it suffered a 43 percent slump in net income last year, which only clocked in at P7.4 billion. The company attributed the decline to “P8.6-billion accounting adjustment­s from various events during that period.”

Notably, excluding the impact of the said noncash items, ACEN’s profitabil­ity would have shown a significan­t 150 percent year-on-year increase, primarily driven by a substantia­l threefold surge in core operating earnings.

Attributab­le capacity

ACEN’s attributab­le capacity exceeds 4.7 GW as of the end of 2023, with 99 percent of that amount coming from renewable sources.

Of this capacity, 37 percent is currently fully operationa­l, 28 percent is partially operating, and 35 percent is still under constructi­on.

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