ABD grants $36.8 million loan for Pakistan wind power plant

A Turkish power utility will install additional wind turbines to increase the capacity at its wind energy project in Sindh province to 56.4 megawatts from 6 megawatts. For the purpose Zorlu Enerji Elektrik Uretim AS, a Turkish power utility, has won a $36.8 million loan from the Asian Development Bank to expand its wind farm in Pakistan.

The loan will help Zorlu Enerji install additional wind turbines to increase the capacity at its wind power project in southern Sindh province to 56.4 megawatts from 6 megawatts, the Manila- based ADB said in a statement on its website. The loan is for 12 years with a two-year grace period.

Expansion of the wind farm, located about 100 kilometers (62 miles) northeast of Karachi, will cost $147 million and is expected to be completed by 2012.

The wind energy project will be financed with 30 percent equity from Zorlu Enerji. The remaining 70 percent will be financed through the dollar-denominated loans from the ADB, the International Finance Corp., and the ECO Trade and Development Bank, as well as a Pakistan rupee loan from Karachi-based Habib Bank Ltd., it said.

The wind power project will supply power to the national grid through a 20-year power purchase agreement with Pakistan’s National Transmission and Dispatch Company. Pakistan has set a 6 percent target of renewable energy by 2030. Zorlu Enerji’s project is Pakistan’s first privately owned and financed wind farm, the ADB said.

The Asian Development Bank (ADB) will be providing a loan to help fund the first privately owned and financed wind farm in Pakistan to help improve the country’s energy generation. The output from the wind power plant will provide much-needed additional power for Pakistan, improve the country’s energy security, and lower reliance on fossil fuels. Zorlu Enerji Electrik Uretim wind farm will use the 36.8 million dollars loan to install wind turbines to increase the output of its wind farm from the current 6 megawatts to a total 56.4 megawatts. The wind farm is located in the southern Sindh, 100 kilometres northeast of Karachi.

"Acute energy shortages, caused by low investment, are cutting into Pakistan’s economic growth," said Michael Barrow, Director in ADB’s Private Sector Operations Department, adding this deal should provide a bankable template for future privately funded wind projects, and send a signal that Pakistan’s wind sector is attractive for private sector investment and financing.

Pakistan relied heavily on imported fossil fuels for the bulk of its energy needs, said ADB statement received here on Friday, adding however, it was costly, and put a heavy burden on Pakistan’s foreign exchange reserves, and left the country vulnerable to supply disruptions and global price fluctuations. Investment in new capacity has lagged, whereas demand has surged by over 40 percent over the past five years, resulting in regular brownouts in all major urban centres and the introduction of power rationing.

The Government of Pakistan was now engaged in a major drive to expand its energy sources, including tapping renewable energy resources such as wind, given around 50,000 megawatts of capacity were available in the south of the country alone, the statement added.

"We estimate that three to five projects will come on line following ADB’s support for Zorlu Enerji’s wind farm," said Siddhartha Shah, Senior Investment Specialist in ADB’s Private Sector Operations Department.

Zorlu Enerji, listed on the Istanbul Stock Exchange, owns and operates Turkey’s largest wind farm, the statement said adding it is 68 percent owned by Zorlu Holding AS, one of the largest conglomerates in Turkey.

The existing 6 megawatts wind farm project is currently dispatching power to the Hyderabad Electric Supply Company. Once the second construction phase is complete – expected in 2012 – the 56.4 megawatts wind farm will supply power to the national grid through a 20-year take-or-pay power purchase agreement with the National Transmission and Dispatch Company.

The approved tariff will ensure that the electricity is priced competitively, with the rate dropping over time as project debt is paid down. "The project will have multiple benefits including helping realise the government’s target of six percent renewable energy in the total power mix by 2030, and contributing to employment opportunities and economic growth in one of the poorest regions of the country," said Shah.

The total cost of the project is 147 million dollars with 30 percent financed through equity provided by Zorlu Enerji and the rest through US dollar-denominated loans from ADB, the International Finance Corp, the ECO Trade and Development Bank and a Pakistan rupee loan from Habib Bank. ADB’s loan will carry a tenor of 12 years with a two-year grace period.

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