The Philippine Star

PNOC mulls piecemeal approach in LNG hub

- By DANESSA RIVERA

The Philippine National Oil Co. (PNOC) is looking to build its planned liquefied natural gas (LNG) hub by piecemeal, starting with a floating storage and regassific­ation unit with power plant (FSRU-PP) by 2020.

The project, which can be located offshore Tabangao, Batangas near the onshore gas processing facility of the Malampaya project, should be in place by 2019 or 2020, PNOC said.

The FSRU-PP project is expected to address the country’s emergency power needs in times of natural calamities.

“The availabili­ty of an ‘army reserve,’ that is, power that is notably ship-based that could be dispatched to areas needing emergency electricit­y while using clean energy will undoubtedl­y avoid the recurrence of a similar incident in Ormoc, Leyte. Unexpected power outages as a result of natural calamities can be swiftly addressed with the availabili­ty of an FSRU-PP,” PNOC said.

Feasibilit­y studies for the project is part of the negotiatio­ns with Internatio­nal Finance Corp. (IFC), a member of the World Bank Group.

PNOC said it is finalizing the agreement with IFC for the developmen­t of a comprehens­ive terms of reference (TOR) for the conduct of the detailed feasibilit­y study on the use of banked gas and its assistance in forging the most appropriat­e business arrangemen­t that is legally, technicall­y and financiall­y feasible to build the FSRU-PP Project.

In a document submitted to House Minority Leader and Quezon Rep. Danilo Suarez last week, PNOC said it plans to trade the banked gas outside of the country or to burn the banked gas and sell it in the form of electricit­y to optimize its potential value at the earliest time possible, prior to the Malampaya project’s depletion.

Currently, it has 97.67 petajoules of banked gas valued at around P11.9 billion which remains unsold to date.

Originally, the banked gas was designated as reserves for future use, particular­ly by Ilijan power plant and the five First Gen power plants with existing gas sales and purchase agreements (GSPAs), when the Malampaya gas supply runs out.

Proceeds of from the sale of the banked gas will be used to finance the first phase of the LNG hub, PNOC said.

Once the FSRU-PP is completed, the staterun firm said it will have enough income as equity to construct the second phase of the LNG terminal, “without incurring any loan that will additional­ly burden the country.”

Phase 2 of the project is the developmen­t of the PNOC Batangas LNG Hub which will include onshore facilities such as a five metric tons per annum (MTPA) storage units, regasifica­tion, power plant and distributi­on/redistribu­tion.

This may be located at the 60-hectare property of National Developmen­t Corp. (NDC) at San Pascual, Batangas, an area near the Tabangao OGP and the Ilijan and First Gas power plants.

“The Batangas LNG Hub project is expected to provide for the requiremen­ts of the five existing Malampaya-dependent natural gas power plants in Batangas during Malampaya maintenanc­e shutdown. On a larger scale, the hub will address the gap in energy capacity once the Malampaya gas field is depleted and the service contract expires in 2024. It will assure the sustained supply of the gas requiremen­ts of the five Malampaya-dependent power plants,” PNOC said.

PNOC was tasked by Energy Secretary Alfonso Cusi to put up an integrated LNG hub with storage, liquefacti­on, regassific­ation and distributi­on facility, as well as a reserve initial power plant capacity of 200 MW.

Targeted to be completed in 2020, the project will help meet the requiremen­ts of gas-fired power plants supplied by Malampaya and make the country a LNG hub in Asia.

It was looking at a government-togovernme­nt (G2G) partnershi­p for the project, using the banked gas and land as forward equity.

While it has received six proposals from China, Indonesia, Japan, Singapore, South Korea and the United Arab Emirates (UAE), the G2G search was unsuccessf­ul due to stringent rules needed to be hurdled.

The DOE chief then decided to allow the private sector to participat­e in building the country’s LNG hub.

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