The Philippine Star

DMCI unit to build Palawan power plant

- By NEIL JEROME C. MORALES

Consunji-led DMCI Power Corp. has bagged a contract to build in Palawan.

“DMCI Power was announced yesterday as the winning bidder for the 25-megawatt (MW) power plant of Palawan Electric Cooperativ­e (PALECO),” the company said in a disclosure.

eration rate at P9.38 per kilowatt-hour, it added.

“Required capacity is 25 MW by September next year. We will put up the diesel-fueled power plant in Palawan,” DMCI Power president Nestor Davidas said in a phone interview.

Davidas said the company prefers coal- fired power plants but Palawan is already in need of additional power supply.

Early this month, the Puerto Princesa city council declared a state of emergency given power outages in the province.

DMCI Power, for its part, will build coalfired power plants in Palawan due to high operating costs of the diesel plant.

Davidas said DMCI Power will start commercial operations of a 15-MW coal plant in October 2014. Another 15MW power plant will start producing electricit­y in 2017.

Davidas said the company is also looking for a third 15-MW facility that will use ized bed” technology that is more environmen­t friendly.

The Consunjis earlier announced their plan to put up 7.5- MW coal- fired power plant in the Small Power Utilities Group (SPUG) areas.

State-run National Power Corp.’s unit SPUG is mandated by the Electric Power Industry Reform Act of 2001 to undertake remote villages or areas not connected to the main transmissi­on grid in Luzon, Visayas and Mindanao.

There are 14 areas under SPUG including Catanduane­s, Romblon, Siquijor, Sulu, Tawi-Tawi and Basilan that are under review prior to privatizat­ion.

To date, the Consunjis, through Semirara Mining Corp., has been operating a SPUG in Masbate for two years already.

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