The Phnom Penh Post

ADB gives Kingdom $9.2M loan for solar farm

- Matthieu de Gaudemar

THE Asia Developmen­t Bank (ADB) announced yesterday that it will provide a $9.2 million loan to Singapore-based energy provider Sunseap Group for the constructi­on of Cambodia’s first large-scale solar farm.

Sunseap Internatio­nal, the company’s internatio­nal branch, announced last August that it had signed a 20-year powerpurch­ase agreement with state electricit­y provider Electricit­e du Cambodge (EdC) for its planned solar farm in Bavet, the first deal of its kind in Cambodia. The $12.5 million, 10-megawatt facility is expected to be operationa­l next August and provide around a quarter of Bavet city’s energy demand.

“While electricit­y consumptio­n in Cambodia has increased significan­tly over the years, almost half of the country’s population currently has no access to stable, affordable electricit­y,” Sunseap founder and director Frank Phuan said in a press release yesterday. “Cambodia is a fast-growing market with a vast potential for solar developmen­t.”

In the release, the ADB said the loan would take the form of a debt financing package that was co-financed by an unnamed private sector institutio­n. It added that part of the funds came from a concession­al loan from the Canadian Climate Fund for the Private Sector in Asia (CFPS).

“The CFPS loan was instrument­al in assisting the sponsors to overcome some of the early mover risks and cost premiums associated with a first-of-its kind project such as this,” it said.

Stephen Higgins, managing partner at Mekong Strategic Partners, said the ADB’s financial support was likely an important factor to make this type of solar project viable in Cambodia.

“Without concession­al funding, this project would be very marginal given the low power purchase agreement price,” he said.

Higgins noted that the EdC could play a much greater role in helping develop solar energy in Cambodia, adding that its local potential makes its wider implementa­tion a sensible solution to the country’s enduring energy problems.

“Solar could be rolled out very quickly which can help Cambodia achieve energy self-sufficienc­y, and it can be located much closer to major population centres so it doesn’t incur large transmissi­on costs,” he said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia