Gulf News

Taqa secures $ 1.4b loan for Moroccan power plant

JORF LASFAR EXPANSION IS EXPECTED TO BOOST POWER GENERATION BY MORE THAN 10% Constructi­on of the plant began in September 2010, with Taqa providing interim funding. The expansion is now approximat­ely 80 per cent complete and overall costs remain within th

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Abu Dhabi National Energy Co ( Taqa), the state- owned firm which recently bought some of BP’s North Sea assets, sealed a $ 1.4 billion ( Dh5.14 billion) financing for the expansion of its power plant in Morocco.

Jorf Lasfar is the largest coalfired power plant in the Middle East and North Africa and the first independen­t power producer ( IPP) in Morocco, supplying 40 per cent of the kingdom’s electricit­y output, Taqa said in a statement.

The financing is the largest in over a decade for an internatio­nal project in Morocco with Japanese and Korean export credit agencies participat­ing for the first time in Moroccan project finance, the utility and energy firm said. Japan Bank for Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n ( JBIC), Nippon Export and Investment Insurance ( NEXI) and Export- Import Bank of Korea ( Korea Eximbank) are providing direct loans and loan guarantees for more than 50 per cent of the total project debt.

Lead arrangers

Banque Centrale Populaire ( BCP), BNP Paribas, Société Générale and Standard Chartered Bank were the mandated lead arrangers for the credit facilities. The lenders are funding some 75 per cent of the total project costs with Taqa committing around $ 400 million in equity funding. The 16- year, multi- currency non- recourse debt, maturing in 2028, totals around $ 1.3 billion with working capital and other facilities amounting to $ 100 million.

“Taqa’s commitment to meet Morocco’s energy needs was not conditiona­l on financing, as the project is already 80 per cent complete,” Abdullah Saif Al Nuaimi, vice- chairman of Taqa said. “But this financing shows that, for the right deal with the right structure, significan­t nonrecours­e funds can be attracted to the Middle East and North Africa at competitiv­e rates.”

The expansion of Jorf Lasfar will increase Moroccan power generation capacity by more than 10 per cent.

Constructi­on of the plant began in September 2010, with Taqa providing interim funding. The expansion is now approximat­ely 80 per cent complete and overall costs remain within the $ 1.6 billion budget.

The two new units are scheduled to be commission­ed in December 2013 and April 2014.

Taqa, owned 75 per cent by the government of Abu Dhabi has investment­s in the energy and power sector from India to the Middle East and Canada.

The firm has been active in recent months buying BP’s North Sea assets for $ 1.3 billion and a 53.2 per cent operating interest in an oil block in Iraqi Kurdistan in separate deals. It also raised $ 2 billion from a two- part bond sale in December.

 ??  ?? Gulf News Archives One of Taqa’s industrial plants. Taqa, owned 75 per cent by the government of Abu Dhabi, has investment­s in the energy and power sector from India to the Middle East and Canada.
Gulf News Archives One of Taqa’s industrial plants. Taqa, owned 75 per cent by the government of Abu Dhabi, has investment­s in the energy and power sector from India to the Middle East and Canada.

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