How serious is govt?
May 31, 2006 | 12:00am
Recent media commentaries and coffee shop talk have been centering on PSALMs refusal to draw on the YNN performance bond despite the latters repeated inability to come up with its payment of US$227 million already long overdue. Some have even started to question PSALMs ability and desire to achieve the National Power Corp.s mandated privatization.
Giving more credence to these suspicions was PSALMs decision to again extend, this time to June 30, the deadline for YNN to pay up its US$227 mukkuib since the bid of YNN is supposedly one that is difficult to duplicate should PSALM call for a rebidding.
Many have been asking who is behind the YNN Pacific Consortium and why does it seem like PSALM is bending backwards to the point of risking its own reputation?
From what weve been able to gather, YNNs local shareholder is a certain Sunny T. Sun. He also happens to be a distributor of Duraflex Wires and Cables and basically sells these and other products to power utilities like the Manila Electric Co. (Meralco).
YNN Holdings Corp. owns 60 percent of Duracom Mobile Power Corp., a small 108-megawatt barge-mounted independent power producer (IPP) in Navotas selling power to Meralco.
Disconcerting though is the information that Duracom may still have billions of pesos in loans that remain unpaid and need restructuring. But then again if PSALM did its homework, it would have known this by now.
PSALM also would have learned about the company being classified as financially distressed and of the rumors in financial circles that hundreds of millions are being paid each year to its principal via the holding company YNN Holdings Corp. in the form of marketing fees.
Mr. Suns partner in Duracom is East Asia Power Resources Corp. which in turn is owned by a bankrupt American company El Paso Energy. When the Duraco-El Paso partnership was formalized in 1993, the president and part-owner of East Asias Philippine operations was Jesus Alcordo, currently a commissioner of the powerful Energy Regulatory Commission (ERC).
The Sun-Alcordo relationship was further galvanized when they brought another 108-MW barge into the partnership under a sister company called East Asia Diesel Power Corp. Documents exposed by Senator Juan Ponce Enrile some years ago show that Alcordo agreed to pay Mr. Sun commissions running to about P0.15-P0.21/kwh or as high as P150 to 200 million per year and a success fee of US$3 million for securing contracts for the additional capacity.
Today we hear that the Sun-Alcordo relationship is still alive and kicking. Weve been told that during the Masinloc saga, Alcordos nephew and son played key roles in a bungled attempt to bring in Australian partner Great Pacific Financial Corp. (Is it true that Alcordos nephew is CEO of Australia-based Great Pacific Investments?)
Industry insiders suspect that Alcordo may also have had a hand in granting Mr. Suns Duracom a 20-percent increase in its tariff rates in January 2004 effectively giving them an additional P20 million per month in revenues.
More recent incidents have also been perceived as calibrated for Meralco to sign a contract with YNN.
The ERC official guidelines entitled "Amendment To The Guidelines For The Recovery Of Costs For The Generation Component Of The Distribution Utilities Rates", issued in Dec. 22, 2004, requires distribution utilities to certify that they have conducted public bidding in the procurement of new power supply contracts with generation companies.
This was clearly seen as a move to protect consumers and ensure transparency as distribution utilities source their power. Immediately thereafter, many of the utilities dutifully complied and publicized their requirements for power supply in the major dailies. But in a surprising move a few weeks ago, the ERC issued Resolution No. 21 which temporarily suspended the requirement of transparent public bidding for utilities procuring their power supplies. The resolution was issued with the inane excuse that the guidelines were being temporarily shelved because they forgot to conduct public hearings on them.
My coffee shop friends say that they hope this temporary freeze was not meant to conveniently open a window for Sunny Sun to sign a sweetheart contract between YNN and Meralco. What made them suspicious is that only three out of the five ERC commissioners signed Resolution No. 21, and Alcordo was one of them.
PSALMs handling of Masinlocs privatization shows how dangerously vulnerable the process is to hustlers and influence peddlers.
PSALM should seriously consider rebidding the Masinloc plant but with full Transition Supply Contracts, either from Meralco or some other Luzon utilities. In doing so, PSALM would generate more credible bidders willing to pay higher prices.
We understand that the government is losing up to P70 million in foregone interest for each month it delays receipt of the US$227 million from YNN. Maybe its time government shows it means business by calling on YNNS bond if deadlines are not met.
For comments, e-mail at [email protected]
Giving more credence to these suspicions was PSALMs decision to again extend, this time to June 30, the deadline for YNN to pay up its US$227 mukkuib since the bid of YNN is supposedly one that is difficult to duplicate should PSALM call for a rebidding.
Many have been asking who is behind the YNN Pacific Consortium and why does it seem like PSALM is bending backwards to the point of risking its own reputation?
From what weve been able to gather, YNNs local shareholder is a certain Sunny T. Sun. He also happens to be a distributor of Duraflex Wires and Cables and basically sells these and other products to power utilities like the Manila Electric Co. (Meralco).
YNN Holdings Corp. owns 60 percent of Duracom Mobile Power Corp., a small 108-megawatt barge-mounted independent power producer (IPP) in Navotas selling power to Meralco.
Disconcerting though is the information that Duracom may still have billions of pesos in loans that remain unpaid and need restructuring. But then again if PSALM did its homework, it would have known this by now.
PSALM also would have learned about the company being classified as financially distressed and of the rumors in financial circles that hundreds of millions are being paid each year to its principal via the holding company YNN Holdings Corp. in the form of marketing fees.
Mr. Suns partner in Duracom is East Asia Power Resources Corp. which in turn is owned by a bankrupt American company El Paso Energy. When the Duraco-El Paso partnership was formalized in 1993, the president and part-owner of East Asias Philippine operations was Jesus Alcordo, currently a commissioner of the powerful Energy Regulatory Commission (ERC).
The Sun-Alcordo relationship was further galvanized when they brought another 108-MW barge into the partnership under a sister company called East Asia Diesel Power Corp. Documents exposed by Senator Juan Ponce Enrile some years ago show that Alcordo agreed to pay Mr. Sun commissions running to about P0.15-P0.21/kwh or as high as P150 to 200 million per year and a success fee of US$3 million for securing contracts for the additional capacity.
Today we hear that the Sun-Alcordo relationship is still alive and kicking. Weve been told that during the Masinloc saga, Alcordos nephew and son played key roles in a bungled attempt to bring in Australian partner Great Pacific Financial Corp. (Is it true that Alcordos nephew is CEO of Australia-based Great Pacific Investments?)
Industry insiders suspect that Alcordo may also have had a hand in granting Mr. Suns Duracom a 20-percent increase in its tariff rates in January 2004 effectively giving them an additional P20 million per month in revenues.
More recent incidents have also been perceived as calibrated for Meralco to sign a contract with YNN.
The ERC official guidelines entitled "Amendment To The Guidelines For The Recovery Of Costs For The Generation Component Of The Distribution Utilities Rates", issued in Dec. 22, 2004, requires distribution utilities to certify that they have conducted public bidding in the procurement of new power supply contracts with generation companies.
This was clearly seen as a move to protect consumers and ensure transparency as distribution utilities source their power. Immediately thereafter, many of the utilities dutifully complied and publicized their requirements for power supply in the major dailies. But in a surprising move a few weeks ago, the ERC issued Resolution No. 21 which temporarily suspended the requirement of transparent public bidding for utilities procuring their power supplies. The resolution was issued with the inane excuse that the guidelines were being temporarily shelved because they forgot to conduct public hearings on them.
My coffee shop friends say that they hope this temporary freeze was not meant to conveniently open a window for Sunny Sun to sign a sweetheart contract between YNN and Meralco. What made them suspicious is that only three out of the five ERC commissioners signed Resolution No. 21, and Alcordo was one of them.
PSALMs handling of Masinlocs privatization shows how dangerously vulnerable the process is to hustlers and influence peddlers.
PSALM should seriously consider rebidding the Masinloc plant but with full Transition Supply Contracts, either from Meralco or some other Luzon utilities. In doing so, PSALM would generate more credible bidders willing to pay higher prices.
We understand that the government is losing up to P70 million in foregone interest for each month it delays receipt of the US$227 million from YNN. Maybe its time government shows it means business by calling on YNNS bond if deadlines are not met.
For comments, e-mail at [email protected]
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