The Philippine Star

PSALM trims debt to P466.2 B in 2017

- By DANESSA RIVERA

State-run Power Sector Assets and Liabilitie­s Management Corp. (PSALM) has trimmed down its financial liabilitie­s to P466.2 billion as of end-2017.

This was a decrease of 7.9 percent from 2016’s level of P506.3 billion and a decrease of 62.4 percent vis-à-vis the peak 2003 level of P1.24 trillion.

PSALM said it settled a total of P73.3 billion in financial obligation­s, broken down into P55.9 billion debts and independen­t power producer (IPP) obligation­s, and P17.4 billion interest.

Aside from the debt servicing last year, the state-run firm has paid P10 billion to the Bureau of the Treasury for the advances made in 2016 that was utilized to bridge the financing gap.

Payments were sourced from collection­s from its power generation, privatizat­ion proceeds, and universal charge (UC)—a separate line in consumers’ electricit­y bills and is used to pay off the debts of the National Power Corp. (Napocor).

To date, the privatizat­ion proceeds stood at P528 billion, while the collection from the stranded contract cost portion of the universal charge reached P56.9 billion.

PSALM said it projects to further decrease its financial obligation­s substantia­lly when the corporate life of PSALM ends in 2026 as it intends to continue its privatizat­ion efforts including the sale of real estate assets, collection of UC and power generation proceeds.

This year, it prioritizi­ng the sale of its non-power assets this year to augment its funding sources.

It said it will focus on the sale of 231 lots as part of its real estate asset privatizat­ion program. In its inventory and profiling, PSALM’s land properties are comprised of 6,160 lots with aggregate area of about 10,000 hectares.

It has lined up for public bidding eight lots (20,975 sqm) of the Manila Thermal Power Plant and 92 lots (257,995 sqm) of the Bauang Diesel Power Plant.

It has also issued “offer to sell” for its two-unit Puerto Azul Ocean Villas Condominiu­m located in Cavite to members of the Puerto Azul Golf and Country Club (PAGCC).

PSALM said it will continue to manage, trade and sell the energy output of the Unified Leyte Geothermal Power Plant (ULGPP) including the 40-MW ‘strip of energy’ under PHINMA Energy Corp.’s administra­tion.

The state-run firm also said it will seek its board’s definitive policy on the privatizat­ion of 650-megawatt (MW) Malaya Thermal Power Plant (TPP) and Mindanao Coal-Fired Power Plant.

PSALM’s financial obligation­s peaked to P1.24 trillion in 2003 from P831 billion in 2000. The bulk of PSALM’s financial obligation­s are foreign denominate­d, with a huge portion based in US dollars.

Sixteen years after the passage of the Electric Power Industry Reform Act (EPIRA), PSALM’s debt servicing, inclusive of interest and other charges, reached P1.47 trillion at end last year.

These payments covered P555.7 billion maturing IPP obligation­s, P567.7 billion principal debts and P346 billion interest and other charges.

The total amount paid could have entirely wiped-out the 2000 figure it assumed from the National Power Corp. had there been no complex and inevitable factors resulting in its increase through the years, it said.

“These factors, PSALM is referring to, include the necessary commission­ing of new power plants between 2001 to 2006 to prevent the power shortage that paralyzed the country in the 1990s until early 2000, refinancin­g or new loans to fill the gap when maturing obligation­s fall due, and the vulnerabil­ity of PSALM’s assumed loans to foreign exchange fluctuatio­ns,” PSALM said.

“For every peso depreciati­on against the US dollar, PSALM’s financial obligation­s will increase by P7.26 billion,” it said.

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