Загрузил Антонина Трубчикова

AZITO

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AZITO, Côte d’Ivoire
The project, the essence of which was the creation of the 288 MW power plant, and 225 kV
transmission system was financed in 1999 and was repaid in just 12 years. It is considered to
be the first private infrastructure project in Sub-Saharan Africa of such scale (not taking
South Africa into consideration) to get not only a private commercial bank term loan but also
receive it on a non-resource basis. The guarantees were provided by the International
Development Agency with participation of multilateral agencies. In 2022 the process of
expansion through transformation of a single-cycle to a combined-cycle power plant took
place though for over 20 years past its construction it has been considered the largest thermal
power plant and a model for the similar projects in the area.
Description of financing.
Sources of finance
sponsors' equity
A loan from the International Finance Corporation (IFC)
B loan from the IFC
commercial banks with an IDA guarantee
Commonwealth Development and bilateral agencies
subordinated debt
cash from operations
Source: created by the author
The project sponsor is Cinergy, a company owned by ABB Energy Ventures, a subsidiary of
the ABB Group; Industrial Promotion Services, the local arm of the Aga Khan Fund for
Economic Development; and Éléctricité de France Internationale. The ABB Group operates
worldwide in power generation, transmission and distribution: automation; oil, gas and
petrochemicals; industrial products and contracting, financial ser- vices; and rail transport.
EDF joined the partnership at a late stage of concession negotiations. It was expected to
benefit the project through its prior experience in Côte d'Ivoire, including ownership interest
and participation in the management of CIE and CIPREL
To protect part of the project debt against interest rate volatility, the IFC provided a US$32
million interest rate swap to convert its exposure from a floating rate to a fixed rate.
History
In the 1980s EECI ran into financial difficulty because of overexpansion, droughts, financial
mismanagement, the deterioration in the country's economy and problems with collecting
bills from other government agencies. The company accumulated significant debt despite
levying some of the highest electricity tariffs in the world. At the same time, the poor
performance of many other public enterprises, the increasingly competitive international
economic environment, and successful experience with a water and sewerage concession
granted to a private Ivorian/French consortium led the government to formulate a
privatisation program in 1990 and the government signed a 15-year concession for
generation, transmission, distribution, export and import of electricity with Compagnie
Ivoirienne d'Électricité (CIE), which is owned by a consortium consisting of Bouygues, a
major French construction and engineering company that had also been involved in the water
and sewer concession; Éléctricité de France (EDF), the French national utility; the
government of Côte d'Ivoire; and other Ivorian shareholders. While EECI was to have a
continuing and important role as the owner of the assets, directing new investments,
overseeing CIE and managing the financial flows of the electricity sector, CIE assumed
responsibility for the operation, maintenance and necessary upgrades of the country's
generation, transmission and distribution facilities, in return for an exclusive franchise with
the ultimate consumers of electricity. The government retained ownership of the gas fields
and guaranteed the power sector's take-or-pay contracts with gas producers. It continued to
set all fuel and electricity tariffs. CIE was able to turn the system around quickly, improving
billing, collections and over- all financial management, and starting to earn a profit within
two years. Earnings from the electricity sector in turn helped the government to make
overdue payments on its own inter- national debt. Meanwhile, EECI, many of whose staff
were transferred to CIE, did not function effectively in its supervisory role. As a result most
of its responsibilities were shifted to other government organisations. Success with the CIE
concession led the government to increase private-sector participation.
Government's objectives
 To build on the success of the CIE and CIPREL concessions
 To increase the number of electricity producers
 To encourage greater private participation
 To upgrade the country's infrastructure without adding a burden to the government
budget
Accordingly, the Azito project was designed as a competitively tendered concession
from the government that would be financed in part from private commercial banks,
alongside the multilateral agency banks. The government also had a number of broader
objectives, such as increasing generation capacity, extending access to more rural areas
and benefiting the environment through the use of a clean-burning fuel such as natural
gas.
Bidding and concession process
The government launched an international competitive bidding process in November 1996.
There were four bidders: AES, Cinergy, Enron and Tractebel. Cinergy won primarily by
proposing the lowest electricity tariff. Because of conflicts among the Ivorian regulatory
agencies concerned, the concession agreement not signed until September 1998 and the
financing was not structured until early 1999. Among the issues that caused the delay were
the lack of a formal legal structure for build-operate-transfer (BOT) contracts and the routing
and financing of the transmission line. Throughout the world contractors negotiating to
become the first independent power producer (IPP) in a given country have introduced legal
issues neither covered by local law nor even seen before by local government authorities. In
the course of the Azito project negotiations, the issues included the use of project assets for
collateral and the availability of inter- national arbitration in the event of a project dispute.
Legal issues related to the concession included structuring power sector revenues and
preventing dilution of Azito project cash flows as a result of subsequent project approvals.
The cash-flow system of ranking was reviewed to give IPPs and gas suppliers equal pro rata
treatment, and gave private participants in the sector priority over government agencies, in
order to allay investors' and lenders' payment risk concerns. To protect the interests of
existing power projects the government pledged not to approve new projects unless they met
the following coverage ratio: total power sector revenues less fees paid by the government to
CIE were to be no less than 1.3 times payments to fuel suppliers and IPPs. If the power sector
did not meet this ratio, payments to new entrants would be subordinated to amounts due to
existing power plants and fuel suppliers. The government modified the tariff structure to
improve the financial viability of the power sector. In doing so, it tightened the eligibility
requirements for subsidised power, making sure that the subsidies were restricted to lowincome users. Under the original plan, the transmission line was to cross heavily populated
areas. After objections from the IFC and others, it was rerouted. The government originally
planned to finance the transmission line but could not find a source of funding. As a result,
the trans-mission line was financed along with the power plant by the public/private
international banking syndicate. After the concession contract was signed in 1998, the joint
arrangers started to work on a financing for just the power project. Then the government
expanded the scope of the financing to include the transmission line. At financial closing
Cinergy would on-lend funds for the transmission line to the government, which would be
responsible for the construction of the transmission line. This required the bankers to do more
due diligence and other work to pre- pare the financing documents, and, as a result, delayed
the financial closing. Also, from a lender's perspective, it increased the government's
obligations and therefore the project's political risk. As a result, the lenders asked for
additional multilateral agency protection and were able to negotiate a political risk guarantee
from the IDA. The political risk guarantee covers only 15 per cent of the project cost, but 50
per cent of the commercial bank funding.
Project risk factors
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Construction risk is mitigated by a fixed-price, date-certain EPC contract.
Operating risk is mitigated by an all-in operations and maintenance (O&M) contract.
Gas supply risk pertains to the adequacy of supplies in the offshore fields. All parties
agreed that these would be sufficient to supply the Azito project but would have to be
re-evaluated in the event of another power project after Azito.
Commercial risk, in terms of the respective prices of fuel and electricity, known as the
'spark spread', is assumed by the government. The government has made a
commitment to set electricity tariffs at a level that ensures the financial viability of the
sector, but it may be politically constrained as to the level of tariffs that it can charge
to the ultimate consumers.
Country risk includes deterioration of political stability, including an attempted
mutiny by a group of soldiers, which escalated into an unsuccessful coup attempt in
2002, and a reduction in the trade surplus due to falling international commodity
prices, especially for coffee and cocoa. The current account deficit, which began back
in the 1990s due to increased debt service obligations and the suspension of
international aid, has worsened due to excessive tax incentives, weak cost controls
and extra-budgetary expenditures. The AFD, the IMF and the World Bank suspended
the provision of reform-related aid and loans in 1999 and 2000 due to concerns about
corruption, poor governance and non-fulfillment of debt service obligations. In
conclusion, it should be noted that the country-specific economic risk associated with
the Azito energy project is a more alarming factor than when the financing of the
project was organized in 1999, but it is, of course, mitigated by the participation of
multilateral institutions. The lenders see the IDA's political risk guarantee as not just
political risk cover, but a commitment by the World Bank Group to monitor the
project and encourage the gov- ernment of Côte d'Ivoire to meet its commitments; and
Azito will test the agency's leverage in fulfilling that role.
Critical success factors:
 Côte d'Ivoire's economic policies and growth after its 1994 devaluation and its debt
restructuring initiatives gave project sponsors and lenders confidence in the success of
a private project in the power sector.
 Power needs sufficient to justify a project of Azito's size were clearly demonstrated.
 The government, Société Générale and the IFC were able to demonstrate to the
financial markets that the Ivorian power sector had established economic viability
through sound tariffs and financial management.
 Lenders could see a precedent in the CIE and CIPREL concessions, which were
working well.
 The government was willing to acknowledge the need to develop concession contract
laws to cover Azito and future projects.
 As a result of its recent work in power sector reform, the government had clear
notions concerning the role of private participants and social goals such as rural
electrification.
 The government put together a strong team with good technical, financial, managerial
and negotiating skills.
 The IDA partial risk guarantee was critical in attracting commercial lenders to a
country that was not yet an established international borrower, but the project
financing would have taken less time if the guarantee had been introduced earlier in
the negotiating process
 The joint arrangers, the IFC and Société Générale, had to bridge cultural gaps, but
team- work and the complementary skills of the two organisations were essential in
designing a loan structure that could be syndicated successfully in the commercial
bank market.
 Among other strengths, the three sponsors brought technical skills, previous
experience with similar projects, experience in Côte d'Ivoire, risk-bearing capacity
and insurance relationships to the project.
 The new sectoral cash-flow waterfall was the major structural innovation, establishing
a system for power concessions that provides clear risk allocation and sound financial
management.
Sources:
 “Azito Power Plant Expansion, Abidjan, Côte d’Ivoire”,
https://www.power-technology.com/projects/azito-power-plantexpansion-abidjan/
 http://www.azitoenergie.com/fr/aboutus/aboutazitoenergie
 https://projectsportal.afdb.org/dataportal/VProject/show/P-CI-F00-007
 https://web.archive.org/web/20210602181633/https://www.industryabout.
com/country-territories-3/1505-cote-d-ivoire/fossil-fuels-energy/22345azito-gas-power-plan
 https://web.archive.org/web/20221206201057/https://www.powertechnology.com/projects/azito-power-plant-expansion-abidjan/
 https://africa-energy-portal.org/news/cote-divoires-azito-power-plantexpansion-attracts-miga-guarantees
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