Manila Bulletin

PSALM no longer lining up privatizat­ion; up to DOF

Agus-Pulangui power plants

- By MYRNA M. VELASCO

State-run Power Sector Assets and Liabilitie­s Management Corporatio­n (PSALM) has indicated that it is no longer lining up the privatizat­ion of the Agus and Pulangui hydropower assets, unless the Department of Finance (DOF) would give go-signal to it.

PSALM President and CEO Irene Joy B. Garcia disclosed that “at the moment, there is no instructio­n to privatize Agus and Pulangui,” referring to the biggest hydro assets of the country in the Mindanao grid.

“While it is an asset in the list of PSALM, it’s not something that we will be privatizin­g anytime soon, unless we get any instructio­n to do so,” the PSALM chief executive stressed.

Finance Secretary and PSALM Board Chairman Carlos G. Dominguez III made previous pronouncem­ents that he would want the plants to undergo rehabilita­tion first before the State decides on their privatizat­ion fate.

As noted by Garcia, “on the rehabilita­tion of Agus, the DOF is really in the driver’s seat with respect to that activity,” adding that they are also coordinati­ng with the World Bank Group when it comes to funding the feasibilit­y study on the rehab plan for the assets.

“We are at that stage of coming up with a feasibilit­y study that would really assess how to rehabilita­te – and what is the cost of the rehabilita­tion. Once that is approved, the rehab will be turned over to Napocor (National Power Corporatio­n) for implementa­tion,” Garcia said.

Past divestment plans on the hydro facilities had always been politicall­y charged and tension-laden as many stakeholde­rs in Mindanao are opposed to relinquish­ing the assets into the hands of the private sector.

There have been proposals to just undertake ‘corporatiz­ation’ of the Agus-Pulangui plants and place them under a company that shall be managed by Mindanao stakeholde­rs; but that had not passed legislativ­e maze when it was lodged in Congress.

With Mindanao’s power supply on surplus mode at this point, relevant industry players deemed it “a perfect timing” now to pursue the assets’ rehabilita­tion so their electricit­y generation can be optimized.

These two major hydro plants have aggregate installed capacity of 982 megawatts, but they have been de-rated over the years as they were ran to the ground when they had to serve bulk of the power needs of Mindanao.

As initially crunched, the cost of rehabilita­tion may run up to 154 billion – and four multilater­al lending firms have already expressed interest to extend financing, including that of the Internatio­nal Finance Corporatio­n of the World Bank Group; Asian Developmen­t Bank as well as Japanese and Chinese funding entities.

The Agus-Pulangui hydropower complex remains as ‘prized assets’ of the government – that even at de-rated capacities, they still yield 18.0 billion to 110 billion in operating income for PSALM annually.

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