IFC INVESTS US$47.5 MILLION IN PRIVATE SECTOR POWER PROJECT IN THE PHILIPPINES
L. Joseph
Phone: (202) 473-7700
Fax: (202) 676-0365
WASHINGTON, D.C., July 12 -- The International
Finance Corporation (IFC) today signed an agreement to invest US$47.5 million
in a private sector power plant, which will be one of the most competitively
priced and environmentally clean coal-fired power plants in the Philippines.
Under the agreement, the project company, Pangasinan Electric Corporation
(PEC), will build, own, and operate a 1200 megawatt (MW) coal-fired power
plant at Sual in Pangasinan province on Luzon Island. PEC will sell the
electricity to the National Power Corporation (NPC), the state-owned utility,
for a period of 25 years, at the end of which the plant will be transferred
to NPC free of charge. IFC's financing consists of loans of up to US$30
million for its own account and up to US$200 million for the account of
international commercial banks and financial institutions. IFC will also
subscribe up to US$17.5 million in the share capital of PEC, amounting
to about 5 percent of the total equity. The total project cost is about
US$1.36 bil
lion. "Starting with the first independent power generation project
in the Philippines (Navotas in 1989), this is IFC's fourth power project
in the country," said Mr. Everett Santos, Director of IFC's Infrastructure
Department. "The Philippines has now proven that well-structured power
projects can attract considerable long-term development capital to a sector
requiring substantial investments. Furthermore, one of the most important
developmental aspects of the project is the low bulk tariff rate at which
the electricity will be sold to NPC. Luzon's economy is likely to benefit
greatly from the low cost and reliable supply of power." Consolidated
Electric Power Asia Limited (CEPA), a public limited company listed on
the Hong Kong stock exchange, is the key investor in the project and will
operate and maintain the plant. GEC Alsthom N.V. and CEPA Slipform Power
System Limited, a subsidiary of CEPA, will deliver the plant on a turnkey
basis (i.e., fixed price, fixed delivery dates, and guaranteed output).
IFC a
nd CEPA have identified measures to improve the plant's environmental compliance.
The site has been chosen because it requires no dredging and has minimal
impact on nearby communities. Scrubber equipment will be installed to remove
sulfur dioxide from stack emissions. The plant will meet the environmental
regulations of the Philippines Government and the guidelines of the World
Bank. IFC will monitor compliance with these regulations and guidelines.
Three export credit agencies are participating in the financing: the Export-Import
Bank of the United States (US-EXIM), the United Kingdom Export Credits
Guarantee Department (ECGD), and Compagnie Francaise d'Assurance pour le
Commerce Exterieur (COFACE). The Commonwealth Development Corporation of
the United Kingdom (CDC) is providing both a loan and an equity investment
in the project. In addition, four major banks, Samuel Montagu, Banque Paribas,
Banque Indosuez, and Citibank are providing direct loans as well as underwriting
the export credit facilities and pa
rt of IFC's syndicated loan. IFC is a member of the World Bank Group and
is the largest multilateral source of equity and loan financing for private
sector projects in developing countries.
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