Archive | Business

New financing vehicle for Mekong Solar and Wind Energy

New financing vehicle for Mekong Solar and Wind Energy

Armstrong Asset Management has forged a new partnership agreement with The Blue Circle for wind and solar project financing in the Mekong Region of Thailand, Vietnam and Cambodia. With Armstrong agreeing to commit up to US $40 million in equity to fund the construction of wind and solar projects, it will also take a minority equity stake in The Blue Circle – a vertically integrated renewable energy developer operating in the region.

Currently the developer has a pipeline of over 600 MW of renewable energy projects under evaluation or negotiation in the Mekong Region.

“Having an institutional investor like Armstrong as a shareholder and project equity partner, with their extensive operational experience in Southeast Asia and specialization in renewable energy, will certainly accelerate the growth of The Blue Circle portfolio and strengthen our financing ability” said Olivier Duguet, CEO.

The agreement between the two Singapore based companies means that The Blue Circle will also benefit from Seed Capital Assistance Facility (SCAF) funding , an initiative by UNEP, ADB and GEF designed to help project developers overcome some of the challenges of greenfield project development.

Armstrong closed its Clean Energy Fund when it reached $164 million last November. Prior to the latest deal, it had made two investments from the fund: a capital commitment of up to US $30 million to Annex Power for solar PV and biogas projects in Thailand, Indonesia and the Philippines, and an equity stake in Symbior Elements to develop a portfolio of solar generation in Central and Northeast Thailand.

The development follows a recent co-investment deal between Armstrong and Mandiri Investment Management to work together to invest in renewable energy projects in Indonesia, starting with small and micro hydropower developments.

Posted in Business, Renewable Energy, Solar Energy, Wind Energy0 Comments

Dalkia, GE, Clarke Energy open landfill gas power plant in France with Véolia

Dalkia, GE, Clarke Energy open landfill gas power plant in France with Véolia

French waste management and services company Véolia Propreté, energy services company Dalkia and distributed power services provider Clarke Energy celebrated the inauguration of the new Electr’od landfill gas-powered cogeneration plant in Plessis-Gassot, France.

The 17.3 MW renewable power generation facility is France‘s most powerful landfill gas-fueled power plant and features 10 of GE Distributed Power’s Jenbacher gas engines to generate renewable energy and heat for residents and businesses.

The facility was developed by Véolia in cooperation with Dalkia and Clarke Energy.

The new cogeneration plant — which replaces a smaller, less efficient steam turbine-boiler system — uses the landfill’s methane-rich biogas to generate enough renewable electricity to power more than 41,000 French homes (excluding heating). The electricity is sold to Électricité Réseau Distribution France (ERDF) for use by residents and businesses throughout France.

In addition to electricity, the cogeneration facility also produces 30,000 MWh/year of thermal energy, equivalent to the amount consumed by an estimated 2,850 homes.

Installing GE’s gas engines increased the power output of the landfill gas plant by 5 MW while also improving its electrical efficiency from 22 percent up to 40 percent. The new plant consists of 10 Jenbacher units — four 2.7-MW J620 gas engines, five containerized 1.1-MW J416s and one containerized 1-MW J320.

Clarke Energy, GRS Valtech and Dalkia implemented the design, construction and operation of the repowering project on behalf of Véolia Propreté. Specifically, Dalkia is leading the operation of the new Electr’od power plant, optimizing the export of power and energy recovery. Clarke Energy engineered, installed and will maintain the facility to ensure high levels of equipment availability, and GRS Valtech provided the equipment for the landfill gas pre-treatment process.

Posted in Biogas Energy, Business0 Comments

Mitsubishi and Siemens consider joint bid for parts of Alstom

Mitsubishi and Siemens consider joint bid for parts of Alstom

TOKYO (AP) — The possible bid by Mitsubishi Heavy Industries for turbine businesses of French engineering firmAlstom is part of Japan’s effort to carve out a share of the lucrative global energy infrastructure business.

Mitsubishi and German rival Siemens AG said Wednesday they are considering a joint bid for parts of Alstom and will decide by Monday whether to pitch it to Alstom’s board.

Mitsubishi Heavy is Japan’s largest heavy machinery maker with $32 billion in annual revenue. It produces ships, engines, nuclear power plants and arms for Japan’s defense ministry.

Reports indicate Siemens and Mitsubishi Heavy Industries have separate plans for the assets they’d acquire under the joint bid.

The financial newspaper Nikkei reported Thursday that Mitsubishi Heavy Industries and Hitachi, which merged their thermal power generation systems businesses in February, would set up a new joint unit to incorporate the Alstom acquisition. Mitsubishi would own 65 percent and Hitachi 35 percent, the same ratio both hold in their combined business, Mitsubishi Hitachi Power Systems, Ltd.

Mitsubishi CEO Shunishi Miyanaga said his firm can “substantially contribute to a partnership solution for Alstom which will create value for all parties involved, including the country of France.”

The report put the value of the potential acquisitions by Siemens and the Japanese companies at 1 trillion yen ($9.8 billion).

It said Mitsubishi would purchase Alstom’s steam turbine business while Siemens would buy its gas turbines assets. However, Mitsubishi issued a statement saying that details of the acquisition were still under discussion.

It said Mitsubishi would purchase Alstom’s steam turbine business while Siemens would buy its gas turbines assets.

Alstom has favored a $17 billion bid from U.S. company General Electric, but the French government has been resistant to the deal and sought rival offers.

Alstom’s board is to make a decision by June 23.

Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, founded in 1884, employs more than 80,500 people. It and Hitachi have led Japan’s effort to gain an edge in the energy systems industry dominated by GE and Siemens. They’ve found an enthusiastic ally in Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, who has circled the globe drumming up business for Japanese corporations.

Under Abe, many Japanese companies have profited massively from policies aimed at stimulating growth through heavy public spending and monetary easing that have helped weaken the yen, boosting the value of their overseas earnings in Japanese currency terms.

Cash holdings of Japanese corporations are equivalent to nearly 45 percent of their market capitalization, compared with less than 20 percent in the U.S. and about 25 percent in Germany.

But with the population in Japan aging and declining, companies have mostly opted to sit on their massive cash piles.

Domestic corporate investment has shown signs of recovery, but so far has lagged expectations, failing to provide the boost to real wages needed to ensure a sustained recovery from two decades of economic malaise.

Overseas foreign direct investment jumped 10 percent last year, to $135 billion, most of it flowing to Southeast Asia and the U.S., and most of it in non-manufacturing industries, according to Finance Ministry data.

There have been a few big overseas acquistions such as SoftBank Corp.’s purchase of a majority stake in Sprint, the third-largest U.S. wireless carrier, in July 2013 for $21.6 billion and Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group’s purchase of Thailand’s Bank of Ayudhya Public Co. Ltd. for $5.7 billion.

Overall, though, overseas acquisitions by Japanese companies fell 58.8 percent in 2013 from the year before, to $47.7 billion, according to research firm Dealogic.

Posted in Business, Nuclear Energy0 Comments

Alstom-Saft consortium to develop energy storage battery system for EDF

Alstom-Saft consortium to develop energy storage battery system for EDF

A consortium of Alstom and Saft have been awarded a contract by EDF group to provide an initial energy storage system.

The consortium will contribute to the EDF’s demonstration on a megawatt scale for frequency regulation using a lithium-ion battery storage system.

Under the contract, the Alstom-Saft consortium will develop 1MW/30min energy storage and conversion system, using a container of Lithium-ion (Li-ion) batteries, capable of regulating the frequency of the grid.

Saft’s Intensium Max 20M storage system and Alstom’s MaxSine eStorage solution wil be integrated and installed on EDF R&D’s experimental Concept Grid, designed for the development of grids and smart electrical systems.

Alstom Grid senior vice-president of smart grid & HVDC Patrick Plas said the battery energy storage system is part of the Nouvelle France Industrielle project, which was launched by the French government in 2013.

“The consortium will contribute to the EDF’s demonstration on a megawatt scale for frequency regulation.”

“At the cutting edge of smart grid and power transportation infrastructure optimisation technologies, Alstom Grid is contributing its technological expertise to the excellence of the French and European energy industry,” Plas said.

Located on the EDF site of Les Renardières in the south of Paris (Seine-et-Marne region), the storage system and the power converter will be delivered in late 2014.

Saft energy storage activity director François Bouchon said: “With our international experience in the integration of renewable energies especially for networks in the Paris area, this innovative experiment will demonstrate the added value of a battery storage system and the performance of Li-ion technology in this promising sector.”

Posted in Business0 Comments

Iberdrola to invest $5bn in Mexico’s energy sector

Iberdrola to invest $5bn in Mexico’s energy sector

Iberdrola has signed a collaboration agreement with the Mexican Federal Electricity Commission (CFE) for joint development of new renewable energy projects in the country.

As part of the agreement, the company will invest $5bn into Mexico’s energy sector over the next four years.

Iberdrola chairman Ignacio Galan and CFE managing director Enrique Ochoa Reza have signed the agreement, which covers the exchange of ideas and experiences in the energy sector.

The deal also includes electricity generation, energy transmission and distribution and natural gas storage in Mexico.

The deal is likely to strengthen the company’s commitment to Mexico, where it has an operating capacity of more than 5.2GW in wind farms and combined cycle power plants.

Under the agreement, the team will exchange information on implementing new technologies and managerial experiences.

Iberdrola’s generation projects in Mexico include the new Baja California III combined cycle power plant and the extension to the Monterrey facility, which is also a combined cycle plant.

Iberdrola, which started operations in Mexico in 1998, noted that its expansion plans in the country are based on the good prospects of Energy Reform, under which the government calls for around $25.5bn in investment for electricity generation by 2020.

The company is planning to invest appeoximately $5bn in Mexico between 2014 and 2018, with initiatives worth $1.5bn already underway.

Posted in Business, Renewable Energy0 Comments

India plans to construct four giant solar projects with 1,000MW capacity each

India plans to construct four giant solar projects with 1,000MW capacity each

The Indian Government is planning to construct four giant solar power plants, with a capacity of 1,000MW each, as part of its efforts to accelerate the solar energy program.

The potential solar projects are expected to be located in Rajasthan, Gujarat, Jammu and Kashmir, and Ladakh.

In order to make renewable energy more affordable, the Ministry of New and Renewable Energy (MNRE) plans to bundle solar and conventional power, The Economic Times reported.

In order to deal with larger project delays, several sites and cities have been surveyed by the government to assess the solar power’s potential and viability in the country for receiving adequate radiation during its 300 days of sunshine a year.

On condition of anonymity, a senior MNRE official said with the clean energy sector receiving an investment of $7bn last year, where private sectors invested 70%, the ministry is hoping that it would double up by the end of the second phase in 2017.

“Now that MNRE is under the same minister as power, synchronising of common issues such as grid connectivity and sale of power would be better. Policy delays hamper the investment, both domestic and foreign,” official said.

The government is also planning to re-design the Jawaharlal Nehru National Solar Mission, aimed at achieving the target of commissioning of 20,000MW of solar power generation capacity ahead of targeted 2022.

“The government is also planning to re-design the Jawaharlal Nehru National Solar Mission.”

Additionally, the Electricity Act 2003 scope may also be expanded to push for higher renewable energy utilisation.

Indian Power Minister Piyush Goyal said that the ministry has an opinion that the Electricity Act scope should be expanded to empower renewable energy.

Goyal said, “The Electricity Act 2003 does not deal extensively with renewable energy and state utilities cannot be compelled to procure expensive solar power through policies and regulations alone.

“It is believed that cost of solar power can be brought down by increasing the scale of demands for panels and equipment in the country.”

Posted in Business, Renewable Energy, Solar Energy0 Comments

MHPS wins coal-fired power plant construction contract from Pagbilao Energy

MHPS wins coal-fired power plant construction contract from Pagbilao Energy

Mitsubishi Hitachi Power Systems (MHPS), in collaboration with Daelim Industrial of Korea, has been awarded a lump-sum full turnkey contract for the construction of a 420MW coal-fired power generation plant at the Pagbilao coal-fired power generation station in Quezon province in the Philippines.

Pagbilao Energy, which is undertaking the project, has awarded the contract for the third such coal-fired unit at the site (Pagbilao Unit 3).

Under the contract, MHPS will supply the major components such as boilers, steam turbines and generators, the control systems, flue gas desulfurisation (deSOx) systems and other key components for the Pagbilao Unit 3.

Daelim Industrial will be responsible for the delivery of balance of plant (BOP) equipment, which includes coal handling systems and peripheral equipment, and civil engineering and installation work.

Planned to be built adjacent to the existing Units 1 and 2 in Pagbilao, the Pagbilao Unit will utilise sub-bituminous coal for its fuel.

“The Pagbilao Unit will utilise sub-bituminous coal for its fuel.”

The plant has been designed to help supply electricity in order to support the nation’s robust power demand and future economic expansion.

The new power plant is scheduled to go on-stream in November 2017.

Pagbilao Energy is a 50-50 joint venture between subsidiaries of TeaM Energy and Aboitiz Power while TeaM Energy is an equally-owned power generation joint venture between Marubeni and Tokyo Electric Power.

Aboitiz Power is the holding company for the Aboitiz Group’s investments in power generation, distribution, retail and power services.

Posted in Business0 Comments

Seadrill newbuild ultra-deepwater unit West Jupiter contracted for offshore Nigeria

Seadrill newbuild ultra-deepwater unit West Jupiter contracted for offshore Nigeria

Seadrill Limited (“Seadrill”) has secured a contract with Total Upstream Nigeria Ltd for employment of the newbuild ultra-deepwater drillshipWest Jupiter, in support of the EGINA ultra-deep offshore project in Nigeria.

The contract is for a firm period of 5 years and has a total revenue potential for the primary contract term of approximately US$1.1 billion inclusive of mobilization. Seadrill’s total consolidated backlog stands at approximately US$20 billion with the execution of this contract.

The West Jupiter is one of eight 6th generation drillships currently under construction for Seadrill and is expected to be delivered from the Samsung Heavy Industries shipyard in Geoje, South Korea in August 2014. The rig will be outfitted to work in up to 10,000 ft of water and is capable of water depths up to 12,000 ft and drilling depths up to 37,500 ft.

Per Wullf, Seadrill CEO commented, “We are very pleased to have been chosen by Total and its partners for this important project. This contract provides an opportunity to deepen our relationship with a key customer and strategically increase our rig fleet in Nigeria, adding the West Jupiter alongside the West Capella which has been operating in the Usan field Offshore Nigeria since 2008. Seadrill takes pride in continuing to build its presence in the Nigerian oil & gas industry”.

This information is subject of the disclosure requirements pursuant to section 5-12 of the Norwegian Securities Trading Act.

Posted in Business0 Comments

€30m Johnson & Johnson wind turbine project goes live in Cork Harbour

€30m Johnson & Johnson wind turbine project goes live in Cork Harbour

Two wind turbines in Cork’s lower harbour that will support the manufacturing operations of DePuy Synthes and Janssen Biologics have gone live. They will reduce the environmental impacts of both plants and reduce energy costs by 30pc.

This follows a series of recent announcements by Johnson & Johnson in Ireland including the investment of €80 million and the creation of 270 jobs at the company’s new Ethicon Biosurgery manufacturing facility in Limerick in April.

“Wind energy will safeguard jobs, provide security of energy supply, help Ireland meet its EU carbon reduction targets and reduce our dependence on expensive fossil fuels,” Minister for Research and Innovation Seán Sherlock said.

The wind turbine project is the outcome of an unique collaboration between Johnson & Johnson, GSK and Novartis – the Cork Lower Harbour Energy Group.

Collectively, the four companies are responsible for the employment of over 4,000 people in Ireland and have invested more than €2 billion in the Cork area over the last twenty years.

“As the world’s largest health care company, all of us at Johnson & Johnson recognise the critical interdependence between human health and the health of our planet,” explained William Appelo, vice president in charge of Supply Chain, Global Orthopeadics Group at Johnson & Johnson.

“We are committed to minimising environmental impacts across our operations.”

Posted in Business, Green Energy0 Comments

Alstom receives contracts to upgrade two hydro power plants in Switzerland

Alstom receives contracts to upgrade two hydro power plants in Switzerland

Alstom has received two contracts for the modernisation of two hydro power plants in the Canton Glarus and the Canton Valais, Switzerland, worth more than €9m.

Under the first contract, Alstom will upgrade the exciters and discharges of the 37.5MWA hydro generators units 1 and 2 in the Löntsch power plant located in the Canton Glarus for Axpo Power.

The contract scope includes the conversion of the excitation system for brushless regulators, replacing of voltage transformers and circuit breakers with enclosed switchgears and the installation of fully insulated shockproof busbars for the discharges.

The contract includes consecutive processing of machinery, which is scheduled to be completed during the middle quarters of 2015 and 2016 respectively.

With an average annual power generation of 120 million kWh, the Löntsch power plant uses the water of Lake Klöntal fed by a catchment basin of 82km² in the Glarus Alps (central Switzerland).

As part of the second contract, Alstom will replace the four rotors and poles on the Sécheron machines at the Nendaz power plant in Valais for Grande Dixence and Hydro Exploitation.

Alstom Switzerland and Germany sales and project management service head Christoph Ortmanns said, “This order endorses our strategy to support customers with a full services and retrofit offering to secure operational reliability and to optimise their asset management throughout the plant’s lifespan.”

Posted in Business, Hydroeletric Energy0 Comments

1

Industry Video

Upcoming Events

  • No upcoming events
AEC v1.0.4

Newsletter Signup


Advertisements

The Magazine

Advertisements