The Philippine Star

China firm keen on putting up 1,500-MW coal power plants

- DANESSA RIVERA

A Chinese company is putting up several coal merchant power plants in the country with combined capacity of around 1,500 megawatts (MW) as part of a deal with China’s state-run National Energy Administra­tion (NEA), Energy Secretary Alfonso Cusi said.

“We have talked with NEA of China to help us put up merchant power plants in the Philippine­s to trade electricit­y in the spot market to put a downward pressure on the price,” Cusi said adding that, “no investor would be willing to invest in that magnitude without off-takers.”

Merchant plants are power plants that sell their output to the wholesale electricit­y spot market (WESM).

As part of the memorandum of understand­ing (MOU) between the two nations, China Energy Developmen­t Corp. is putting up several demonstrat­ion plants — two in Cebu and one in Luzon.

In his meeting with China Energy, Cusi said the power plants would be coal-fired, but China Energy assured that the technology would be ultra supercriti­cal, meaning it would require less coal per megawattho­ur leading to lower emissions.

“China Energy is scouting three possible sites in Cebu and then in Luzon, they are also looking at several sites,” he said. “They are calling it as demonstrat­ion plants. They will build two 150-megawatt (MW) plants in Cebu and one 600-MW in Luzon.”

Once plans for the power plants are finalized, the projects would be declared as energy projects of national significan­ce, Cusi said.

In June last year, President Duterte signed Executive Order (EO) 30, which give priority status to energy projects.

The EO also created the Energy Investment Coordinati­ng Council (EICC) to streamline the regulatory procedures affecting energy projects of national importance.

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