Title: The NAPOCOR
1The NAPOCOR the Bataan Nuclear Power Plant
DebtsOdious Legacies of Power
- Ana Maria R. Nemenzo
- President, FDC
Freedom from Debt Coalition
2Topic Outline
- NAPOCOR the Public Debt Burden
- Then The Bataan Nuclear Power Plant A Legacy
of Fraud, Corruption and Odious Debt - Now The NAPOCOR and Onerous IPP Contracts -- A
continuation of BNPP legacy
3The NAPOCOR Debt
- The public sector debt stood at P 5.39 trillion
during the third quarter of 2003. - A significant portion of this debt comes from the
National Power Corporation NPC. At end 2003,
its audited financial statement showed P 1.17
trillion in long-term debts and lease obligations
to independent power producers IPPs. Current
estimates put these debts and obligations at P1.4
trillion, equivalent to about 20 of the
consolidated public sector debt. - Of all of NAPOCORs debts, the Bataan Nuclear
Power Plant loan assumed by the Aquino
Government in 1986 and current contracts with
Independent Power Producers are the most
burdensome and onerous. And so our story begins...
4Corruption fraud taint the BNPP debt project
- The deal between Westinghouse and the Marcos
government involved bribery, overpricing and
subcontracting awards to Disini-Marcos companies
during the plant construction I.e., Power
Contractors, Inc. Summa Insurance Corp.,
Technosphere - From 2 Feb. 1979 7 Sept. 1981 Westinghouse
payments flowed into Disini holdings Herdis
Management Interbank to the tune of
5,949,580.16. - Originally quoted at 500 million each for two
power plants, the project price would eventually
be jacked up to 1.1 billion for one plant. When
construction was completed in 1985, total project
cost reached 2.2 billion because of escalating
cost adjustments and additional costs due to
safety corrections.
5BNPP Public Assumption of Private Debts
- The BNPP case is an early example of government
assumption of what were clearly loans and
obligations tainted with corruption and fraud. - In 1986, Marcos falls and flees. President
Corazon Aquino mothballs the BNPP in April 30
through a unanimous Cabinet decision. - However, in October of that year, she issues
Executive Order 55 transferring BNPP foreign loan
obligations assets from Napocor to the national
government. - Finally, on October 15, 1995, the Ramos
government finally agrees to settle with
Westinghouse out of court.
6The Public is still Paying the Assumed BNPP Loans
Today
- The original BNPP loan was 1.084 billion.
- By December 1988, the loan amounted to 2.67
billion, accumulating interests and other
add-ons. - Today, 28 years after construction began, the
Filipino people are still paying the BNPP debt.
Interest payments amounted to P496 million in
2003, while principal payments amounted to P1.78
billion for the same year. Source Bureau of the
Treasury - The Filipino people will continue paying until
year 2018 for the outstanding BNPP debt amounting
to P6. 26 billion as of end-2003.
7BNPP Creditor Complicity Irresponsible Lending
- The U.S. Export Import EXIM Bank financed the
project fully aware of Westinghouses overpricing
and questions about the health, safety and
environmental problems of the plant. It released
project funds despite these questions, even when
Westinghouse still had no license to export the
nuclear plant to the Philippines. - March 1975 Westinghouse quoted 1.2 billion for
one reactor. Then-EXIMBANK president William
Casey later CIA director estimated the price
for the reactor at over 1.6 billion. - September 1975 RP government applied for a loan
with US EXIMBANK for one reactor costing 1.1
billion 722 million 387 million for interest
and escalating costs
8Now Onerous IPP ContractsThe Story Begins
Again...
- In 1986, Pres. Corazon Aquino abolishes the
Ministry of Energy. Afterward, no government
support is given to rehabilitate existing power
plants and build new plants due to lack of fund
to address the looming power shortage, Aquino
signs EO 215 in 1987, opening power generation to
the private sector that has the needed capital. - In the beginning of the 1990s, the country is hit
by power shortages and frequent brown outs. This
grew into a power crisis under Pres. Ramos who
succeeded Aquino. - To address the power crisis, Ramos asked for and
was given emergency powers. Under his
Administration, NAPOCOR enters into expensive 10
to 25-year contracts with independent power
producers IPPs, most of which were signed
during 1992-94. - NAPOCOR currently has 46 IPP contracts 13 were
signed from May 1990 - April 1992 31 from
September 1992 - November 1997 and, 2 in July
November 1998. To date, 35 of these contracts are
active while the rest were already expired or
terminated.
9OBVIOUSLY ONEROUS
- Guaranteed income for IPPs, burden to the
government and the consumers - Take or Pay Agreement Napocor promised to buy
70-90 power (whether actually generated /
utilized or not) of the total capacity of IPP
plant. (Only 20-40 is actually generated). - Fuel Cost Guarantee Napocor will supply fuel to
the IPP, and subsequently absorb any fluctuations
in the cost of fuel. - Foreign Exchange Rate Guarantee All IPP
contracts are in US dollars. NPC absorbs any
dollar fluctuation. - Overpriced Power In 1996 average IPP generation
cost was US76 per MWh, compared with US57 MWh
for NPC.
Source Pascual, Contracted Power Failure, 2000.
10Onerous IPP contracts the Magellan Cogeneration
Inc. case
- MCI operated a coal-fired power plant and
entered into power supply contract with the
Cavite Export Processing Zone Authority (CEPZA)
in June 1993. It also entered into an energy
conversion agreement with NPC in September 1993.
This last contract contained a take or pay
provision. - CEPZA cancelled its contract with MCI in 2001 as
the power plant no longer generated electricity.
Instead of generating electricity, MCI was only
buying cheaper power from NPC and delivering this
to CEPZA. (MCI became a power trader, instead of
power generator). The company is financially and
technically incapable of delivering power. Its
mother company in the United States meanwhile has
filed for bankruptcy in April 2002.
11Onerous IPP contracts the Casecnan Irrigation
and Power Project (year 2000-2020)
- An unsolicited proposal in May 1994 from US
company, CalEnergy (main project proponent), the
project was able to obtain government guarantees. - Expensive Power US0.165/kwh equivalent to
almost P9/kWh compared to NPCs hydropower
costing less than P2 / kWh. - Expensive Water Delivery Fee The National
Government through NIA pays more than P2 billion
annually (as contingent liabilities, that become
actual liabilities under NIA) - Government Guarantees / Risk Absorption The
project proponents will receive at least 72.7
million a year from the NIA and S36.4 million a
year in energy fees from NPC, whether the project
delivers the contracted volume of water or
whether its power plant operates and generates
electricity.
12Onerous IPP contract Caliraya-Botocan-Kalayaan
- IMPSA
- Although an unsolicited project, CBK-IMPSA was
given government guarantee - IMPSA was never technically and financially
qualified to undertake the CBK power project. It
disregarded NEDA rules on government bidding. - The contract contains onerous provisions grossly
disadvantageous to the government - Under the original agreement, the project should
have started in 2004. But due to the supplemental
agreement forged in 1998, the operation started
earlier than scheduled. In 2002, NPC started
shelling out US2 million.
13Initial Results of Interagency Review Committee
for IPP Contracts
- Of the 35 IPP contracts reviewed by the
inter-agency review committee - Five 5 contain onerous terms i.e. Binga
hydroelectric, MCI, Sual coal-fired, Casecnan,
San Roque multipurpose project - Only six had no legal or financial issues
- 24 had financial, remedial policy remedial
financial issues and need to undergo further
scrutiny by the departments of Justice and
Energy, PSALM, and NEDA
14Impact of NAPOCORS Onerous IPP Contracts
- As consumers, Filipinos have to pay higher power
rates. - NAPOCORs debts and guarantees to these IPPs add
to the public sector debt, which we pay for as
taxpayers. - The government sells bonds in behalf of NPC. In
effect, government assumes NPC liabilities/maturin
g obligations. The government is also the one
paying for the interest of these bonds and other
loans. - From 1999-2003, NG took over P44.5 billion of NPC
debt (source The Deepening Crisis, a white
paper by 11 UP Econ. Professors)
15- According to Manasan, in 2003-2004, the bulk of
the public sector deficit was traced to NAPOCOR
77 - 78 - According to Rep. Andaya, NG-assumed debts by
NAPOCOR will increase the targeted deficit of P
197 billion by P 36 billion this year.
16Thank you . . .
AUDIT ALL PUBLIC SECTOR DEBTS
17Main Sources References
- Republic of the Philippines National Power
Corporation NPC v. Westinghouse Electric
Corporation, Westinghouse International Projects
Company and Burns and Roe Enterprises, Inc.,
Affidavits in Support of Plaintiffs Memorandum
of Points and Authorities, Volume I-II, CA No.
88-5150 (US District Court New Jersey, 1988). - ______________ Complaint for Money Damages and
Equitable Relief and Demand for July Trial, CA
No. 88-5150 (US District Court New Jersey,
1988). - ______________ Plaintiffs Memorandum of Points
and Authorities in Opposition to Defendants
Motion to Stay Pending Arbitration, CA No.
88-5150 (US District Court New Jersey, 1988).
18Main Sources References
- ______________ Republic of the Philippines
Answers and Objections to Defendant
Westinghouses First Set of Interrogatories, CA
No. 88-5150 (US District Court New Jersey,
1988). - Freedom from Debt Coalition, Briefer on the
Campaign on IPPs in the Philippines, September,
2001. - Freedom from Debt Coalition, Power Sector
Privatization in the Philippines Struggles and
Challenges, 2003. - Rosario Manasan, Fiscal Reform Agenda Getting
Ready for the Bumpy Ride Ahead, PIDS Discussion
Paper Series No. 2004-26.