Manila Bulletin

PSALM debt payments hit 1600B by mid-2018

- By MYRNA M. VELASCO

The scale of debt payments and settlement of financial obligation­s by state-run Power Sector Assets and Liabilitie­s Management Corporatio­n (PSALM) reached a whopping 1599.64 billion in the first half of 2018, a company document has shown.

Of the total, the company emphasized that regular debt service amounted to 1371.10 billion; while prepayment totaled 169.45 billion.

The bulk of the financial obligation­s paid had also been those with the contracted independen­t power producers (IPPs) of privatized National Power Corporatio­n (NPC), which amounted to 1153.94 billion.

The level of indebtedne­ss already paid back by PSALM, it was noted, had been comparativ­ely higher versus the magnitude of NPC privatizat­ion proceeds already collected.

It must be culled that under the prescripti­on of the Electric Power Industry Reform Act (EPIRA), the revenues fetched from the divestment of NPC generating assets and supply contracts shall be channeled to pay off the monstrous power sector liabilitie­s.

According to PSALM, the total privatizat­ion proceeds it logged todate summed up to US$19.97 billion or an equivalent of 1944.60 billion based on prevailing peso-dollar exchange rate

Of the figure, 1545.20 billion has already been collected by asset-seller PSALM while the balance of 1383.17 billion would still be up for remittance and amortizati­on payments.

The revenues on asset divestment­s yet to be remitted to PSALM include the remaining balance of 122.73 billion, which accounts for the advance payment of transmissi­on-firm concession­aire National Grid Corporatio­n of the Philippine­s.

PSALM expounded that the total collection­s of 1545.2 billion included “interest income on placements,” and “were exclusivel­y utilized for the liquidatio­n of financial obligation­s.”

Aside from debt settlement­s, PSALM also earmarked 15.10 billion for other privatizat­ion-related expenses; as well as 10.05 billion operating expense for the privatized National Transmissi­on Corporatio­n.

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