Gas and oil power plants are expected to benefit from the new decision of the Ministry of Industry and Trade that has suspended the operation of the competitive electricity generation market.



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The competitive electricity generation market (CGM) was launched in July 2012 to diversify power sources, reduce the country’s dependence on hydropower plants and make the power market more competitive.

MoIT Decision No 3698/QD-BCT that took effect on October 1 suspends the CGM operation to maximise the consumption of gas-based power production, thus benefiting gas power producers at least in the fourth quarter, according to HCM City Securities Co (HSC).

Until now, the Electricity of Viet Nam (EVN) bought power from plants through bidding competitions based on the plants’ costs. EVN will now buy power from the plants based on the prices stated in the power purchase agreements (PPAs) it signed with power producers.

For thermal power producers, the PPA price is calculated on the fixed cost plus operation and maintenance costs, varying cost and material transportation cost.

The PPA price for thermal power plants would be higher than the average CGM price. However, the volume of power EVN purchases from those plants will be lower once EVN gives priority to gas power products, thus making earnings of those producers decline, HSC said.

Hydro plants will suffer

For hydro and gas power plants, the PPA price is calculated by the fixed cost plus operation and maintenance costs.

Of the two types of power producers, HSC assumes hydro power plants would suffer as they have the lowest production cost, pulling the PPA price below the CGM average price by 20-30 per cent. EVN will also buy less from hydro power plants, therefore, their income will be badly affected, HSC said.

The gas power producers that could benefit from the decision are PetroVietnam Power Nhon Trach 2 JSC (Nhon Trach 2), Ba Ria Thermal Power JSC and PetroVietnam Power Company (PV Power), HSC added.

Nhon Trach 2 is running a gas power plant with capacity of 750 megawatts (MW). The decision could increase the plant’s fourth-quarter production by 25 per cent year on year to 1.5 billion kWh.

Viet Nam’s biggest operator of gas power plants, PV Power, is managing the operation of three gas power plants. Two of its plants - Nhon Trach 1 and Nhon Trach 2 plants - used to sell 15-20 per cent of their production on the CGM.

Nhon Trach 2 contributed 60 per cent of post-tax profit in 2016 for shareholders of the parent company PV Power. PV Power earned VND1.6 trillion (US$71 million) in net profit last year.

Ba Ria Thermal Power Company is running a gas power plant with capacity of 388.9 megawatts. Shares of those companies are expected to rise in the near future.

Ba Ria Thermal Power Co and Nhon Trach 2 are listing their shares on the HCM Stock Exchange under code BTP and NT2, respectively.

BTP stocks rose 1 per cent in the last two sessions to end Thursday at VND10,700 (47.5 US cents) per share and NT2 has jumped 25 per cent in the last one month to close at VND29,000 per share.

In addition, PV Power is expected to make its initial public offering (IPO) in December 2017 and the prospects of higher earnings could make PV Power’s shares more attractive, HSC said. 

VNS