Manila Bulletin

Malampaya gas supply to FGen plants halted

- By MYRNA M. VELASCO

The depleting Malampaya field has stopped supplying gas to the three gas-fired power plants of First Gen Corporatio­n starting in the weekend, hence, compelling the shift of the electric power generating facilities to more expensive liquid fuels.

Sources from First Gen confirmed that the 1,000-megawatt Santa Rita gas plant ceased receiving gas supply from the Malampaya field on September 11 (Saturday); while its San Lorenzo plant was not provided with gas since September 12 (Sunday).

The other gas-fed generating facility of the Lopez group – the 414MW San Gabriel plant cannot shift its usage to liquid fuel, so that plant has to be placed on shutdown while there’s no gas coming from Malampaya.

It was conveyed by Manila Electric Company (Meralco), off-taker or capacity-buyer of the generated electricit­y of the First Gen plants, that “about 1,900MW of its gas-fueled contracted capacity are no longer supplied with gas by the Malampaya field.”

In the case of the 1,200-megawatt Ilijan gas-fired power facility, its generation has been limited to 360MW because that’s the only level of gas supply funneled into it by the Malampaya field. That resulted then in 840MW of capacity being taken out from the system.

As of press time, there is no clear informatio­n provided by the government or the Department of Energy (DOE) yet up to when the gas supply snag will last and how will this affect both of the country’s power supply and resulting electricit­y rates to be billed to consumers.

As gathered from Malampaya operator Shell Philippine­s Exploratio­n B.V. (SPEX), “the offshore platform conducted some maintenanc­e over the weekend, which impacted on gas supply delivery to First Gen.”

Given the sudden shift of the gas plants to imported liquid fuels, alarm bells are being raised that such distress in the country’s gas supply will result in electricit­y tariff hikes in the next billing period because liquid fuel is more costly than the gas drawn out from Malampaya.

Apart from rate spikes, fears are likewise being heaved up that available power supply will suffer tightness -- and that could trigger unwarrante­d climbs in settlement prices at the Wholesale Electricit­y Spot Market.

Meralco Vice President and

Spokespers­on Joe Zaldarriag­a said “we will need to assess what the price implicatio­ns will be both on the shift to liquid fuel and overall supply as well.”

He further stated “for now, we have no informatio­n as to when this reported shutdown will last, but rest assured that we will work closely with all the industry players involved.”

The scheduled preventive maintenanc­e shutdown of the Malampaya facility will be next month (October 2-22), hence, that is the expected timeframe when the field stops supplying gas to the power plants and for them to shift to other fuels.

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