Philippine Daily Inquirer

New First Gen gas plant to start running

- By Amy R. Remo

A WHOLLY owned unit of First Gen Corp. has been given the green light by regulators to start the commercial operations of its 97-megawatt San Gabriel Avion natural gas-fired power plant, enabling the company to provide the much needed additional capacity to the Luzon grid.

In a disclosure to the Philippine Stock Exchange yesterday, First Gen said that its unit, Prime Meridian Powergen Corp., received the certificat­e of compliance (COC) issued by the Energy Regulatory Commission for the Avion Plant, which is located within the parent firm’s clean energy complex in Batangas.

A COC, which is valid for five years, is a vital legal requiremen­t for a company to continue the commercial operation of its power plant. It meant that the power firm was found compliant to technical, financial and environmen­tal standards provided in the ERC guidelines and has also stayed within the crossowner­ship and market share limitation­s set by the commission to prevent market abuse.

“With the approval of the COC by the ERC, we can now apply (with) Philippine Electricit­y Market Corp. (PEMC) to change the status of the 97-MW Avion project from commission­ing and testing to commercial operations,” said First Gen president and chief operating officer Francis Giles B. Puno.

“This will allow us to bid Avion’s capacity to the Wholesale Electricit­y Spot Market. The flexibilit­y of the Avion plant will be able to supply immediate power needs to the market especially during peak hours and when other plants go on unschedule­d outages,” Puno said in a statement.

The certificat­e on the change of status of the Avion Plant to commercial operations remained under process with WESM operator PEMC.

The additional capacity from the Avion plant will help secure a more stable supply for the Luzon grid, which has been experienci­ng spates of red alerts since late July. This was due to the simultaneo­us outages of power plants, some of which are under preventive maintenanc­e while the rest were considered forced outages. This has resulted in rotating brownouts within Metro Manila and some parts of Luzon.

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