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Masdar gets $615m solar plant financing

Abu Dhabi, March 7, 2011

Green energy firm Masdar got $615 million of bank financing for the world's largest concentrated solar power (CSP) plant and $153 million equity from its Spanish and French partners, banking sources said.

Eight foreign banks and two local banks underwrote the 22-year deal that was signed last week, bankers involved in the transaction told Reuters on Monday.    

France's Total, Spain's Abengoa and Abu Dhabi-based Masdar plan to build a $600 million plant, named Shams 1, which will have a 100 megawatt capacity and would qualify for carbon credits under the United Nation's Clean Development Mechanism (CDM).

Masdar has a 60 percent stake in its flagship project, while the European partners hold 20 percent each.

"There was high interest from several banks with big tickets due to the project's attractiveness," said one banker, adding that the project is structured as a typical independent power project (IPP) and with a power purchase agreement with Abu Dhabi Water & Electricity (ADWEC) in place.   

Oil-rich Abu Dhabi, capital of the United Arab Emirates aims to obtain 7 percent of its energy from renewable sources by 2020.   

National Bank of Abu Dhabi underwrote $68 million and Union National Bank $41 million of the financing, bankers said.

"The financing was oversubscribed and pricing was competitive," said another banker.   

Japan's Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi and Sumitomo, France's Natixis and Societe Generale and Germany's KfW and West LB have each underwritten $68 million.   

Other banks in the deal are BNP Paribas and Mizuho. BNP Paribas acted as financial advisor.

Masdar has delayed a planned $2.2 billion hydrogen power project and scrapped a solar module manufacturing facility in Abu Dhabi. - Reuters




Tags: abu dhabi | Environment | Masdar | Solar Energy |

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