
ADB $750mn loan to promote smart electricity
transfer in India
Sept. 30, 2011 - brecorder.com
ISLAMABAD: The Asian Development Bank (ADB) will
invest $750 million for power transmission systems
that will help India efficiently transfer electricity
to regions where the need is greatest, spurring growth
and poverty reduction.
The ADB Board of Directors has approved loan financing
for the national grid improvement project which will
allow the bulk transfer of electricity (3,000 MW)
from independent power producers in the western state
of Chhattisgarh, to areas of high demand in the north,
including the national capital territory of Delhi,
said in a statement issued here from Manila, Philippines
here on Friday.
It will be done through the establishment of a 1,300
km interregional transmission link using 800 kV high
voltage direct current (HVDC) technology, a key driver
of smart grid development. The funds will be made
available to the Indian government-owned transmission
utility, POWERGRID.
"Strengthening the interregional HVDC transmission
network will promote open access to power supply,
increase investment in both generation and distribution,
help integrate the electricity market and encourage
power trading and competitive electricity prices," said
Kaoru Ogino, Senior Energy Specialist in ADB's South
Asia Department.
India's demand for electricity, fuelled by its strong
growth, has sharply exceeded supply in recent years,
with a peak power deficit of over 12% in 2010. The
generating capacity has been increasing over the
years in India but expansion of the transmission
network has not kept pace. Some states have the capacity
to generate more power than they need, and creating
interregional transmission ‘corridors'
will allow them to move surplus electricity to areas
short of supply.
To develop the national grid, POWERGRID plans to
invest about $22 billion to more than double the
size of its transmission network between now and
2017, thus expanding its funding base from the present
sources of domestic bonds and government-guaranteed
loans to new foreign commercial borrowing.
ADB is providing both sovereign and non-sovereign
loans, bundled together in a single package to help
leverage interest from foreign commercial lenders
and reduce POWERGRID's reliance on sovereign funding
to more market-based capital raising. The non-sovereign
loan of up to 15 years will be POWERGRID's first
large-scale foreign commercial term borrowing without
government credit support.
ADB's funding consists of a $500 million sovereign-guaranteed
loan and a $250 million non-sovereign corporate loan.
This novel financial structure will provide an anchor
transaction in the total project cost of $2.25 billion
and serve as a catalyst for further engagement from
commercial financiers in POWERGRID's transactions.
The project is due for completion in 2017.
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