MGEN denies acquiring shares in Leviste's solar firm

Meralco PowerGen Corporation has denied acquiring shares in Solar Para sa Bayan Corp., amid allegations by Ombudsman Jesus Crispin Remulla that Rep. Leandro Leviste sold the congressional franchise without approval. Leviste shared the denial on social media. The controversy focuses on how political permissions influenced the valuation of clean energy projects.

On January 11, Batangas 1st District Representative Leandro Antonio Legarda Leviste posted on Facebook the denial by Meralco PowerGen Corporation (MGEN) that it did not acquire any shares in Solar Para sa Bayan Corp. (SPBC), which was awarded a congressional franchise under Republic Act 11357. MGEN stated it is not privy to SPBC transactions and that SP New Energy Corp. (SPNEC) business and operations are not dependent on that franchise. Leviste was reacting to Ombudsman Jesus Crispin Remulla’s allegation that Leviste sold SPBC’s franchise without congressional approval.

This column provides a market analysis, not an indictment of MGEN or its investment decision. It examines how Leviste monetized regulatory confidence and political permission—rather than delivered capacity—to secure a multibillion-peso exit ahead of execution. Republic Act 11357 became law in April 2019 during former President Rodrigo Duterte's term, witnessed by Leviste’s mother, Loren Legarda, before her term ended on June 30, 2019.

The transaction defining Leviste’s rise was not a sale of power but the monetization of optionality. In October 2025, SPNEC shares were sold in a ₱13.76-billion block sale to MGEN. The platform's value rested on service contracts, land banks, permits, grid assumptions, and the belief that execution would follow. This shifted risk downstream to utilities, lenders, regulators, and consumers, who face higher power prices when affordable solar fails to materialize on schedule.

MGEN's denial may be factually correct but does not address the core issue of confidence built on an ecosystem of permissions. It raises questions about political capital's role in shaping the Philippine clean energy market.

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Philippine Vice Governor Roselyn Espina-Paras and family facing media scrutiny outside Ombudsman office amid plunder complaint over DPWH project corruption in Biliran.
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Espina family in Biliran faces plunder complaint over DPWH projects

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Lord Allan Merced-Garcia filed a plunder complaint with the Ombudsman on October 30, 2025, against the Espina family of Biliran over alleged theft in Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) projects. Roving Premier, owned by Vice Governor Roselyn Espina-Paras and her husband, secured over P1 billion in contracts since 2020. This ties into the broader flood control corruption scandal exposed by President Marcos Jr. in July 2025.

The board of SP New Energy Corporation approved a rebranding to MGEN Renewable Energy Holdings Inc. on January 21, 2026, as Batangas Representative Leandro Leviste resigned from the board to distance the company from controversies. This change forms part of transactions where Leviste sold over P20 billion worth of shares.

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On October 27, 2025, Leandro Leviste sold 10.83 billion shares in SP New Energy Corp. (SPNEC) to the Meralco group for ₱13.76 billion. This transaction forms part of a larger divestment potentially exceeding ₱34 billion. It highlights the monetization of renewable energy assets before projects are fully completed.

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