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Audit confirms P122-M losses in PNOC firm’s 2009 coal deal

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MANILA, Philippines—The state-run Philippine National Oil Co.-Exploration Corp. (PNOC-EC) registered losses of more than P122.4 million in an allegedly anomalous importation of almost 70,000 metric tons of Indonesian coal in 2009, according to an internal audit conducted by the energy firm.

The company allegedly entered into the questionable coal deal despite the absence of a supply contract and demand from the state generator, the National Power Corp. (NPC), the audit report, a copy of which was obtained by the Inquirer, showed.

The audit report’s findings confirmed the allegations made by current PNOC-EC chair Gemiliano Lopez Jr. and ex-PNOC-EC chair and director Crismel Verano on irregular coal deals during the previous Arroyo administration.

Rejected coal

The report, dated April 29, 2010, said that after the NPC-run Sual coal-fired power plant refused to accept the Indonesian  coal that arrived on board the Austin in September 2009, the PNOC-EC incurred additional costs for the diversion, transfer and unloading of the shipment to the Asian Terminals warehouse in Batangas for stockpiling.

These expenses included those for demurrage, amounting to P68.3 million; stevedoring, P37.2 million; vessel charter, P8.67 million; arrastre, P4.96 million; wharfage fees and port charges, P2.41 million; survey expenses, P521,766.25; business fees, P246,286.51, and terminal costs, 33,444.62.

The NPC refused to accept the shipment because its coal inventory level was high at the time and because there was no signed coal supply contract yet between NPC and PNOC-EC.

In another report, the PNOC-EC internal audit department revealed that “some coal customers paid their accounts beyond their credit terms.”

Delinquent customers

It said at least six firms owed PNOC-EC a total of P1.42 million interest on past due accounts in 2008 and 2009. The companies include NPC, Republic Cement Corp., Rock Energy International Corp., Holcim Phil., United Pulp and Paper Co., and Taiheiyo Cement Phil.

It said PNOC-EC losses in coal transactions with Republic Cement Corp. in 2009 amounted to P8.05 million and P12.5 million “based on acquisitions at base and net purchase prices, respectively.”

“These transactions were part of the committed volume to RCC in 2008, as stated in the coal supply agreement, but were delivered only in 2009,” it said.

Early this month, Lopez assailed some PNOC-EC top executives for allegedly covering up the irregularities in the firm.

In a Sept. 4 letter to President Aquino, Lopez also reported that an undisclosed number of documents relating to these allegedly anomalous deals were missing.

“When I assumed my post (in late 2010) and upon learning that these transactions were highly anomalous, I immediately asked different groups in and out of PNOC-EC to conduct investigations. However, they were all hampered by the lack of available documents,” he said.

President’s files missing

During his first day in office, he said he found that “the filing cabinet of the PNOC-EC president only had biscuits and candies inside and not a single file on record.”

Lopez also chided the firm’s management for placing a half-page advertisement in the Inquirer and another broad sheet in which it “cleared and acquitted the respondents (in graft cases involving PNOC-EC executives filed with the Ombudsman) without a proper hearing, and without waiting for the decision of the Ombudsman which already acquired jurisdiction over the cases.

Verano meanwhile claimed that aside from the P122.4 million in losses in the Indonesian coal deal, PNOC-EC also incurred losses of more than P20 million in “ghost coal deliveries.”

On July 31, he filed plunder charges against current PNOC president Antonio Cailao and his brother-in-law, former PNOC-EC president Rafael del Pilar and five other top officials of the company. Del Pilar currently sits as a director on the PNOC-EC board.


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Short URL: http://business.inquirer.net/?p=83356

Tags: Arroyo administration , Gemiliano Lopez Jr. , graft and corruption , Indonesian coal , National Power Corp. , pnoc

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_T24N4GB5325RX7QBDUTU7KTKW4 Chi2 Garupa

    PNOC-EC is in coal trading and certainly have no business importing coal without a clear end user. Coal importations require the approval of PNOC-EC board and in most cases approval of PNOC board is also sought by management. Biscuits and candies are normally  managed and controlled by the president’s secretary who is career employee and he/she stays in her/his job until replaced by the incoming company president- a political appointee, I highly doubt this story of biscuits and candies insde the company president’s filing cabinet.

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_W2EUBVORJOQAYONIELNSJYWZJI ksafan0

    Tugisin at ikulong ang mga walanghiya para magsamasama sila ni ate Glo sa kulungan.

  • Wadav

    How can we put these pests to jail? Sobra nman tlaga mga nakaw nila? Darating din ang araw nyo mga lintek n mga KAWATAN!

  • sepultorero

    If Arroyo is corrupt, what can you expect from her underlings? Kung ano ang puno, yun din ang sanga, di ba?

  • http://profile.yahoo.com/THFWCPOYTHUNH4WPXIWOBVQZ3U Lone Ranger

    t#ng !na ninyo lahat. sana makulong kayong mga magnanakaw.

  • jtpa

    Hay! mga eng eng!

  • Diablo_III

    Another corruption again from the past admin hahayz…



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