The Philippine Star

Shell, Phoenix secure deal with PSALM for fuel supply

- By DANESSA RIVERA

Pilipinas Shell Petroleum Corp. (PSPC) and Phoenix Petroleum Philippine­s Inc. have bagged contracts to supply the fuel requiremen­ts of state-run Power Sector Assets and Liabilitie­s Management Corp. (PSALM).

PSPC won the contract for the procuremen­t of supply and delivery of oil-based fuel for Ilijan Natural Gas Power Plant (INGPP) and Phoenix for the Malaya Thermal Power Plant (MTPP).

The state-run firm has issued the notices of award to Phoenix and Shell.

PSALM said PSPC and Phoenix passed the post-qualificat­ion process it conducted that determined the existence, authentici­ty, and sufficienc­y of the eligibilit­y and technical documents they submitted.

In the bid opening that PSALM conducted last April 30, Shell submitted the lowest bid for the supply and delivery of neat diesel oil for INGPP with an offer of P961.16 million.

As for the supply of industrial fuel oil for MTPP, Phoenix emerged as the lowest bidder with a bid amounting P1.14 billion.

Phoenix also submitted the lowest bid for the supply and delivery of diesel oil for MTPP at P47.7 million.

Other bidders who competed for PSALM’s three procuremen­t projects include Petron Corp., Petrotrade Philippine­s, Seaoil Philippine­s, and SL Harbor Bulk Terminal Corp.

PSALM, formed by the 2001 Electric Power Industry Reform Act, is the state firm in charge of privatizin­g government power assets as well as managing National Power Corp.’s power plants and debt. It buys the fuel requiremen­ts of state-owned power plants.

Managed by PSALM, Malaya power plant was designated as a must-run unit (MRU) by the DOE to address supply deficiency when operating power plants in the grid suddenly bog down or become unavailabl­e.

It will operate as an MRU until the DOE finalizes its privatizat­ion schedule.

Meanwhile, the Ilijan power plant is being operated by Korea Electric Power Corp. (Kepco), through Kepco Ilijan Corp., under a build-operatetra­nsfer contract that will expire in 2022.

Its independen­t power producer administra­tion is held by San Miguel Corp., through subsidiary South Premiere Power Corp.

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