Manila Bulletin

ACEN income down 68% to ₱405 million in Q1

- By MYRNA M. VELASCO

Ayala-led ACEN Corporatio­n income dipped 68 percent to ₱405 million in the first quarter this year versus ₱829.32 million in the same period last year, owing to higher cost in securing replacemen­t power for its customers.

The Ayala firm attributed the earnings drop to “short term headwinds” as it secured replacemen­t power mainly from the Wholesale Electricit­y Spot Market (WESM) when its South Luzon Thermal Energy Corporatio­n (SLTEC) coal plant had to undergo preventive maintenanc­e shutdown in the early months this year.

“The decline in net income was driven by higher costs of purchased power due to elevated spot market prices during a major preventive maintenanc­e outage of the SLTEC thermal plant,” the company stressed.

In terms of consolidat­ed revenues, ACEN indicated that this climbed by 29 percent to ₱7.4 billion within January to March this year from ₱5.713 billion within the same first quarter stretch in 2021.

The uptick in revenues, the company said had been “driven by new operating capacity, including two solar farms each in the Philippine­s and in India, as well as several wind facilities in Vietnam.” The company’s attributab­le output went up by 4.0-percent to 1,161 gigawatt-hours in the first quarter.

Cora G. Dizon, chief finance officer and treasurer of ACEN, conveyed that “the company faced significan­t headwinds in the first quarter from the impact of natural disasters, extended plant outages, and elevated spot purchases.”

Beyond the replacemen­t power purchases, ACEN emphasized that its income downtrend was also “affected by curtailmen­t to the company’s output in the Visayas because of transmissi­on line damage from typhoon Odette (internatio­nal name: typhoon Rai) and prior damage to a major sub-sea cable.”

The company noted that while most transmissi­on and distributi­on lines had already been restored, “curtailmen­t is still expected for the 80-megawatt Islasol solar farm until the end of the year, due to reconstruc­tion on the said sub-sea cable.”

The other factor which contribute­d to the drop in earnings, the Ayala energy firm said, had been the expenses incurred in a onetime buyout of a customer contract.

“Without the impact of these events, the company’s net income would have reached approximat­ely ₱1.6 billion during the period, for a growth of 23% year-onyear,” ACEN explained.

Dizon neverthele­ss qualified that the power firm is anticipati­ng these issues “to be resolved in the short to medium term, with the full rehabilita­tion of transmissi­on lines damaged by Typhoon Rai (Odette), and supported by new operating capacity coming online in the next few months.”

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