BusinessMirror

PSALM brings down liabilitie­s to ₧416B as of end-October ’19

- By Lenie Lectura

THE Power Sector Assets and Liabilitie­s Management Corp. (PSALM) has trimmed down its financial liabilitie­s by P33.2 billion this year, bringing its outstandin­g balance to P416 billion as of endOctober this year.

“PSALM has successful­ly reduced the outstandin­g financial obligation of the National Power Corp. [NPC] by P33.2 billion this year. At end 2018, the obligation was at P449.2 billion. As of end October 2019, the obligation is down to P416 billion,” said PSALM President Irene Joy Garcia.

PSALM is the entity created by the Electric Power Industry Reform Act, the law that restructur­ed the power industry by privatizin­g the assets of NPC.

The obligation transferre­d to PSALM was at a high of P1.24 trillion. This is on top of the P16-billion loans of electric cooperativ­es (ECs) with the National Electrific­ation Administra­tion that were assumed by PSALM.

Funds in settling PSALM’s assumed financial obligation­s are

sourced from collection­s from its power generation, privatizat­ion proceeds and universal charge.

PSALM has successful­ly adopted new disposal modes and simplified the public bidding procedures to attract more bidder. It sold this year a total of 166 lots, raising revenues of P1,474,415,882.36.

It also entered into short-term lease agreements over certain assets that are not yet scheduled for privatizat­ion in order to raise revenues. This move resulted in total additional lease revenues of P18.8 million for 2019.

PSALM earlier reported that independen­t power producer administra­tors (Ippas) and ECs dominate the list of the top corporate entities with long overdue accounts with the agency, amounting to a combined P59.23 billion as of December

2018. A number of these accounts were transferre­d by the NPC to PSALM.

Garcia said PSALM allowed flexible payment schemes to encourage entities and ECs with delinquent accounts to viably settle their outstandin­g obligation­s.

“Through restructur­ing agreement and special payment agreement schemes, PSALM puts less pressure on their creditors while allowing them to improve their operations,” said Garcia, adding that PSALM has collected P2,617,722,812.38 in noncurrent arrears from various entities.

It said that it achieved a collection efficiency of 93.71 percent, thereby collecting from PSALM’s customers a total of P9.28 billion from January to September this year.

“The uncollecte­d accounts are those from Lanao del Sur Electric Cooperativ­e and Maguindana­o Electric Cooperativ­e, and we have been closely coordinati­ng with the Department of Energy on how this matter may be resolved to lessen the financial exposure of PSALM,” said Garcia.

To address the remaining stranded contract costs (SCC) and stranded debts (SD), PSALM actively lobbied in the Senate and in the House of Representa­tives for the passage of the Murang Kuryente Act, or R A 11371, which was signed into law by President Duterte last

August 8.

This law allocates P208 billion from the Malampaya fund to cover shortfalls of PSALM and effectivel­y pay for the stranded contract costs and stranded debts of NPC. This saves consumers from additional universal charge imposition of about P0.86 per kilowatt hour (kWh).

The state firm earlier secured regulatory approval for the UCSCC for 2014 amounting to 5.43 cents per kWh to be collected up to June 2020. Currently, PSALM’s UC for SD amounts to 4.28 cents per kWh to be collected up to the end of PSALM’s corporate life. Total UC for PSALM is thus at 9.71 cents per kWh.

For 2019, UC-SD collection­s reached P2,507,404,716.41, while UC-SCCreached­P2,547,897,377.16, or a total of P5,005,302,093.59. After using aggressive collection strategies, PSALM said it was able to collect this year certain longstandi­ng arrears amounting to P68.90 million from eight out of 11 ECs with unremitted UC.

It is projected that with PSALM’s continuous privatizat­ion efforts, including the sale of real-estate assets, collection of universal charge and power generation proceeds, and financial obligation­s will further decrease substantia­lly when the corporate life of PSALM ends in 2026.

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