AboitizPower secures ₱7.4-billion loan from BPI for 221-MW Olongapo solar plant
Aboitiz Renewables, Inc. (ARI) announced its Zambales solar power plant, which is nearing completion, has secured a financing deal with the Bank of the Philippine Islands (BPI).
In a disclosure to the Philippine Stock Exchange on Friday, Sept. 12, ARI said that AP Renewable Energy Corp. has inked a ₱7.4 billion project loan from BPI for the 221-megawatt peak (MWp) Olongapo solar plant.
This funding will finance the engineering, construction, operation, and maintenance of the project, which is currently about 95 percent finished.
The solar facility is scheduled for testing and commissioning by the third quarter of the year, which would then be connected to the Castillejos 230 kilovolt (kV) substation of the National Grid Corporation of the Philippines (NGCP).
Jimmy Villaroman, president of Aboitiz Renewables, said that the project's completion would contribute to the country’s energy transition goals, as it is slated to be the company’s largest solar facility to date.
“Every project we build is the product of a highly motivated organization contributing to AboitizPower's energy transition effort,” he said.
AP Renewable Energy Corp. is the project company that manages the construction of the Olongapo solar plant, and currently holds investments and interests of Aboitiz Power Corp. in various clean power assets. As of July 2025, AboitizPower holds a 23.86 percent share of the national power generation capacity market.
This includes geothermal, large hydropower, run-of-river hydro, wind, battery energy storage systems, and solar.
In an effort to increase the company’s solar capacity, ARI has previously shared its plans to energize the San Manuel solar project in Pangasinan this year. The company disclosed its plans last July to expand its current solar capacity of 532.19 MWp by the end of 2025.
Previously, the company secured approval to connect its 137.4 MW alternating current (MWac) Calatrava solar power plant in Negros Occidental to the nation’s grid.
By 2030, ARI anticipates its renewable energy portfolio to reach 4,600 MW.