The Philippine Star

MVP Group explores posibility of building own LNG terminal

- By DANESSA RIVERA

Companies led by businessma­n Manuel V. Pangilinan have joined forces to explore the possibilit­y of developing their own version of a liquefied natural gas (LNG) terminal amid the mounting need to support the country’s gas-fired plants to continue providing power supply.

Pangilinan said Manila Electric Co. (Meralco) and Metro Pacific Investment­s Corp. (MPIC) are conducting a study on building an LNG terminal in light of the expected depletion of the Malampaya deep water gasto-power plant by 2024.

“It takes a minimum three years to build a gas terminal, a minimum of 10 years to build a gas field. So we are slowly hitting the wall if we don’t move,” he said.

Pangilinan said the study would include whether they would pursue an onshore facility or a floating storage and regassific­ation unit (FSRU).

He said the study could be finished “early next year” since the output of the Malampaya project is expected to start declining by 2022.

“(We need the LNG terminal) as soon as feasible. Hopefully the gas terminal will be ready by that year otherwise you either have no power or use (more expensive) gas, but the cost of your power output will be high,” Pangilinan said.

The group has tapped consultanc­y firm McKinsey & Co. for advisory on power generation investment­s, renewables, and LNG.

“We have engaged McKinsey. They’re at it for so many months already. We see all sorts of numbers here and there. It’s not an easy problem that’s why I can appreciate why government is taking time to decide,” Pangilinan said.

McKinsey is a global management consulting firm that serves a broad mix of private, public, and social sector institutio­ns. Among its services include electric power and natural gas to help businesses “rethink strategies, build capabiliti­es, and pursue new opportunit­ies.”

The group, however, has yet to inform the Department of Energy (DOE) of its interest in building an LNG terminal.

DOE is accepting letters of intent (LOI) from companies interested to build the LNG terminal under the Philippine downstream natural gas regulation (PDNGR), which details the rules and regulation­s governing the downstream natural gas industry.

So far, the agency has received interest from 13 companies—both local and foreign—to develop the country’s LNG integrated terminal.

The DOE plans to start constructi­ng the country’s LNG hub by mid-2019 to safeguard against the anticipate­d contract expiration of the Malampaya gas facility.

The facility is also targeted to become an LNG hub for Asia, complement­ing those in Japan and Singapore.

Meralco had previously looked into the possibilit­y of investing in LNG, which is a natural gas converted into liquid for ease of storage or transport.

In 2015, Meralco was in talks with Osaka Gas Co. Ltd., Japan’s second largest natural gas supplier, for a possible developmen­t of an LNG facility.

At that time, Osaka Gas was doing a feasibilit­y study on a planned $2-billion, 1,500 megawatt (MW) gas-fired power plant project with Meralco.

In 2016, however, Meralco said the lack of a firm energy mix policy, demand, and favorable pricing levels had stalled plans to enter the LNG space.

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