Philippine Daily Inquirer

Ayala energy unit seeks stake in Bataan plant expansion

Gnpower eyes another 600-MW facility

- By Amy R. Remo

THE AYALA GROUP, through its energy arm AC Energy Holdings Inc., is in discussion­s with GNPower Mariveles Coal Plant Ltd. Co. regarding an ownership stake in the planned expansion of the latter’s 600-megawatt coal-fired power plant in Mariveles, Bataan.

“Ayala plans to be part of the expansion. We are still in discussion with our partners regarding the ownership stake for the expansion. It will most likely be a separate company or but it has not been finalized yet,” AC Energy president Eric T. Francia said in an interview.

Francia was referring to the planned 600-MW expansion of GNPower, whose existing 600-MW coal facility in Bataan is set to start commercial operations this month.

Should AC Energy pursue the partnershi­p, the Ayala-led firm will not be required to increase its stake in GNPower to participat­e in the planned expansion, Francia explained.

In December 2012, the Ayala group acquired a 17.1-percent stake in GNPower for $155 million. The deal was in line with the Ayala group’s plan to embark on $2.5 billion worth of power projects and build a portfolio of about 1,000 MW in generation capacity over the next five years.

AC Energy has so far committed $325 million (or roughly P13.3 billion) in equity investment­s for four power projects out of its planned $700-million capital outlay for the energy sector over a five-year period. The amount has been earmarked for previous interest acquisitio­ns in energy firms and for upcoming power projects.

Apart from GNPower, $20 million was used to acquire a 50-percent stake in NorthWind Power Developmen­t Corp., which owns and operates the country’s first and only wind project—the 33-megawatt Bangui wind farm; $90 million for the constructi­on of two 135-MW coal units in Batangas in partnershi­p with Trans-Asia Oil and Energy Developmen­t Corp., and $50 million for a mini hydropower project in North Luzon.

“Our strategy of record for AC Energy is to have a combinatio­n of convention­al (or fossil fuel) and renewable energy resources. Given the realities, the need for the country to have baseload and relatively competitiv­ely-priced power, we see the mix [of ou r power portfolio] tipping toward the convention­al energy (such as coal). We will deploy 70 percent of equity capital in the first five years to convention­al sources and 30 percent on renewable energy sources,” Francia earlier explained.

“Over time, we will have a more balanced mix and more of renewable energy although we believe it will take us some time to get there,” he said earlier.

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