Mitsubishi Power gets maintenance deal for Batangas LNG complex
Photo of San Ilijan Power Plant (From SMC Global Power).
Mitsubishi Power, a subsidiary of Tokyo-listed Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Ltd., has secured a long-term contract to maintain the 1,200-megawatt Ilijan combined-cycle power plant in Batangas.
In a statement on Monday, June 22, Mitsubishi Power said the industrial tech giant signed a long-term parts and services agreement with South Premiere Power Corp., a subsidiary of LNGPH.
Under the terms of the deal, Mitsubishi Power will supply components, spare parts, and specialized technical advisory services for the facility’s M501G gas turbines. Financial terms of the agreement were not disclosed.
The Ilijan facility forms the baseline of LNGPH’s broader 2.5-gigawatt integrated liquefied natural gas import, regasification, and gas-to-power complex in Batangas. The complex serves as a key energy corridor for the main island of Luzon.
LNGPH is a joint venture controlled by San Miguel Global Power Holdings Corp. and Chromite Gas Holdings Inc. Chromite Gas is itself a partnership between Manila Electric Co.’s power generation arm, Meralco PowerGen Corp., and Aboitiz-led Therma Natgas Power Inc.
The upgrade is designed to safeguard supply consistency through the next two decades, according to LNGPH President and Chief Executive Officer Yari A. Miralao. The plant currently holds a power supply agreement that runs through 2040.
For Mitsubishi Power, the agreement extends a 24-year operational footprint at the Ilijan site, where it installed the facility’s original turbines ahead of its commercial launch in 2002. The company’s technology accounts for more than 25 percent of the Philippines' total installed power generation capacity, spanning infrastructure sites in San Lorenzo, Makban, Pagbilao, and San Buenaventura.
The Japanese conglomerate maintains a substantial engineering presence in the Philippines, employing more than 1,600 local engineers. Its domestic operations also house one of only four global TOMONI Hubs—digital centers that use predictive diagnostics and cloud analytics to track and optimize power asset performance across the Asia-Pacific region. (Gabriell Christel Galang)