The Philippine Star

TransCo tapping Malampaya fund for Vis-Min grid

- By DANESSA RIVERA

The National Transmissi­on Corp. (TransCo) is seeking President Duterte’s clearance to tap the Malampaya fund to build the long-delayed Visayas-Mindanao grid connection, its top official said.

TransCo president and CEO Melvin Matibag said the staterun firm is preparing a draft memorandum and executive order for that purpose.

“We will justify why it should be TransCo, instead of NGCP (National Grid Corp. of the Philippine­s) [doing the Visayas-Mindanao grid interconne­ction project],” he said.

If it is allowed to use part of the Malampaya fund, the cost of building the project will not be charged to consumers, he added.

“If TransCo will build the interconne­ction project, there will no longer be a pass-on cost to consumers since funding will be sourced from the Malampaya fund,” Matibag said.

Currently, only Luzon and Visayas are interconne­cted while Mindanao is isolated. Interconne­ction between Luzon and Visayas allows both grids to get supply from each other in times of supply shortfall.

NGCP, which clinched a 25-year concession to run the country’s transmissi­on network, said it has completed the hydrograph­ic survey determinin­g the viable location for the Visayas-Mindanao grid interconne­ction which is along the country’s western seaboard – beginning in Cebu and ter- minating in Dipolog — and would cost to around P52 billion.

It targets to complete the project by 2020, as directed by the Department of Energy (DOE).

But TransCo said it is studying whether government can pay for the P52-billion cost of the interconne­ction project.

However, Sen. Sherwin Gatchalian said the decision on who would build the project should be based on what would be cheaper and would give more benefits to consumers.

And while the grid interconne­ction is energy-related, Congress still has to clarify where the fund can be used to prevent anomalous dealings, the lawmaker said.

“We’re looking at passing a law to clear it up because there are a number of interpreta­tions on the use of Malampaya fund,” Gatchalian said.

The Malampaya project is operated by Shell Philippine­s Exploratio­n BV and Chevron Malampaya LLC with PNOC Exploratio­n Corp. as a minority shareholde­r.

The service contract provides for a scheme in which the government gets 60 percent of the earnings after deducting certain charges.

However, proceeds of the project were reportedly diverted to spurious beneficiar­ies, including non-government organizati­ons associated with suspected pork barrel scam mastermind Janet Lim-Napoles, which were investigat­ed by Senate.

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