KUALA LUMPUR: 1Malaysia Development Bhd (1MDB), which last week won the
coveted 2,000mw coal-fired power plant known as Project 3B, may move the
proposed project site to Pulau Indah, Selangor, from its original location in
Jimah, Negeri Sembilan.
There has been rampant market speculation, with
confirmation from several industry sources, that the state-owned investment
company is in discussion with the Energy Commission (EC) to explore the
relocation of the RM11 billion project to the 310-acre (125.45ha) piece of land
in Pulau Indah which 1MDB recently purchased from Tadmax Resources Bhd for
RM317.3 million.
The Pulau Indah land was acquired barely a week before
Project 3B was awarded. 1MDB originally proposed to undertake Project 3B at the
recently acquired 1,400mw Jimah Power Station.
It is understood, however,
that a change of location would directly contravene the tender rules. The EC is
under pressure to explain why it awarded Project 3B to 1MDB when YTL Power
International Bhd had put in the lowest bid.
Both 1MDB and the EC could
not be reached for comment.
Given that 1MDB now won the project, the
change of location to Pulau Indah stands to benefit all the stakeholders — 1MDB,
Tenaga Nasional Bhd as the sole off-taker, and the public as end-users,
according to industry players. They believe Pulau Indah would be a better site
for the power plant due to the size and location of the land.
Tadmax, one
of the seven original contenders for Project 3B, had proposed the Pulau Indah
site in its bid but the company did not make it to the next round after failing
to meet the technical and financial requirements.
“Building two 1,000mw
blocks on the Jimah site would be no mean feat. There simply isn’t enough room.
Just use Google maps and see how much space the 1,400mw Jimah plant currently
occupies. Then compare this with the vacant land [next to the existing Jimah
plant] and imagine building a new 2,000mw plant there,” an industry player told
The Edge Financial Daily.
Therefore, 1MDB is expected to undertake land
reclamation if the Jimah site is to accommodate the huge 2,000mw plant. But land
reclamation is not only expensive, it is also time-consuming. The scale of the
earthworks would also make it challenging to meet the October 2018 deadline to
hand over the first phase of Project 3B.
Also, the bigger site at Pulau
Indah means that there would be room for future expansion, a bonus for 1MDB.
When the tender for Project 3B was originally opened it was supposed to be a
greenfield project.
Most of the existing brownfield coal-fired plants are
already heavily planted up and lack room for expansion, said another industry
player, adding that a new greenfield site would broaden the coal-fired
planting-up options for the EC in the future.
Industry players also noted
that it would be easier for 1MDB to build the transmission line from Pulau Indah
to the Olak Lempit injection node than to build the line from Jimah to Olak
Lempit. Both transmission lines would be about 30km long.
“The northern
alignment [Pulau Indah to Olak Lempit] for the transmission lines would mainly
run through plantation land, which is easy to acquire. In comparison, the
southern alignment from Jimah runs through some land that might be difficult to
acquire,” said an industry player.
However, the northern alignment would
require the cooperation of the Selangor government.
It remains to be seen
if 1MDB and the EC will be able to relocate Project 3B. On the one hand it would
reflect poorly on the tender process if bidders were allowed to make material
changes to their proposals even after the tender was awarded. If the EC allows
the project to be relocated, it is likely the other bidders will call for a
re-tender.
However, the relocation could be justified if 1MDB can offer
lower tariffs to Tenaga.
This article first appeared in The Edge
Financial Daily, on March 05, 2014.
For more information on
Building and Construction seminars, please visit www.asiapacificevents.com
No comments:
Post a Comment