Business World

MWC to take P60-M hit from Boracay closure

- By Victor V. Saulon Sub-Editor

MANILA WATER Co., Inc. (MWC) expects to take a hit of around P60 million to P70 million when Boracay is closed to visitors for six months starting on April 26, but the Ayala-led firm is looking at opportunit­ies in the island, including a waste-to-energy project.

Ferdinand M. dela Cruz, MWC president and chief executive officer, said the company derives around P142 million annually from its operations in Boracay. The bulk or 70% of Boracay’s water consumptio­n comes from tourists, and the rest from residents.

“So if you project six months and then take a hit there, it could be a range… It could be anywhere from half that if it is all zero or a little higher, so about half to about 60%. So that would be the range of hit,” he said in a press conference after the company’s annual stockholde­rs meeting on Monday.

“So you’re looking at about P60-70 million, which we have to cover from other businesses. By and large, it’s something that’s not very very big for the enterprise to take a hit,” Mr. Dela Cruz added.

Boracay Island Water Co., Inc. is a joint venture between Manila Water and the government’s Tourism Infrastruc­ture and Enterprise Zone Authority (TIEZA). Boracay Water holds a 25-year concession to serve potable water and operate the sewerage system.

In 2017, Boracay Water recorded a billed volume of 5.5 million cubic meters (mcm), up 13% from 4.9 mcm in 2016. This compares with the 488.4 mcm for Manila Water’s concession in Metro Manila, which grew by 2% from 478.9 mcm in 2016.

Mr. Dela Cruz said Manila Water has a pipeline of projects whether with local government units (LGUs) or business-to-business potential partners, which span across the Philippine­s and the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN).

“These are business developmen­t timelines, so we’ll see which ones will develop,” he said, adding that one of the projects that the company is looking at is wasteto-energy.

Geodino V. Carpio, MWC chief operating officer, said the company’s innovation­s unit Manila Water Total Solutions Corp. has team that is working full time to look for opportunit­ies in the “nexus of wastewater, solid waste and energy.”

“For Boracay, we can do as much as 1 megawatt (MW),” he said. “Sludge contains a lot of capability to release gases which are combustibl­e and could be harnessed to generate energy. That same process of harnessing energy from sludge could also be used for organic solid waste.”

BORACAY PROJECT

Mr. Carpio said MWC had been awarded the first proponent status in Boracay for a proposal to develop a waste-to-energy facility.

“We are awaiting approval from the board of the Boracay LGU and find out what happens after that,” he said. “If we get approval then it goes to the PPP (public-private partnershi­p) process of challengin­g, and hopefully after the challengin­g we get the project and we can start the project within the year. So it’s all up to the Boracay LGU at this point.”

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