The Philippine Star

Petro Solar gets ERC OK for FIT eligibilit­y

- – Danessa Rivera

Petro Solar Corp. has clinched regulatory approval for a guaranteed payment for its 50-megawatt ( MW) solar power plant, adding to a list of assured revenue streams for the company.

The company said it was granted the certificat­e of compliance as a feed-in-tariff ( COC- FIT) eligible power plant by the Energy Regulatory Commission (ERC) for its 50-MW solar farm.

Petro Energy Resources Corp. ( PERC) president Milagros V. Reyes said in a statement the COC- FIT is a testament to Petro Solar’s “satisfacto­ry compliance to all technical, organizati­onal, legal and financial requiremen­ts to operate a solar power plant.”

“As important, it guarantees FIT payments to Petro Solar from Feb. 10, 2016 to Feb. 9, 2036 at the approved FIT rate of 8.69 per kilowatt-hour (kwh),” she said.

Petro Solar is partly-owned by publicly- listed PERC, through its subsidiary, Petro-Green Energy Corp. (PGEC) with 56 percent, and EEI Power Corp., a wholly-owned subsidiary of publicly-listed EEI Corp., with 44 percent.

Reyes said the FIT payment will be an addition to PERC’s sources of revenues, which are mostly renewable energy projects.

“Along with the FIT payments for our 36-MW Nabas wind facility and the longterm energy supply contract for our baseload 20-MW Maibarara- 1 geothermal power station and its ongoing 12-MW ( Maibarara- 2) expansion, these assured revenue streams boost PERC’s expansion from our Gabon oil production towards renewable energy developmen­t and power generation,” she said.

Apart from the company’s bottom line, PGEC vice president and COO Francisco Delfin Jr. said the COC-FIT also ensure royalty payments to host communitie­s.

“This COC- FIT release effectivel­y supersedes the PAO- FIT and confirms and extends the FIT payments for 20 years. Not only will this assure our lenders and investors but it also ensures Petro Solar ’ s remittance of the national wealth royalty and ER 1- 94 payments for the benefit of our host communitie­s as long as we are generating power,” he said.

PERC will continue to explore other renewable energy developmen­ts as it moves away from oil production, Reyes said.

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