Majorwaves Energy Report August 2020

Page 49

www.majorwavesenergyreport.com

POWER

Azura Power Deal: Nigeria Not Liable To Pay $1.2bn – Presidential Aide By Ikenna Omeje about this matter, there is no doubt at all that the binding agreements which brought about the plant were signed in 2013 and 2014. On April 22, 2013, the Power Purchase Agreement was signed. “This is the contract that contained the Take or Pay clause, which is now the crux of the manufactured controversy. That clause is however standard in PPAs. What it says is that government will pay for the energy produced by the plant, whether it uses it or not. Without that assurance, nobody would invest money in such a huge power plant. Large infrastructure projec ts are executed using project finance principles and debt, guarantees of repayment are always needed to reach financial close.

T

he Special Adviser to the President on infrastructure, Ahmed Zakari, has said that Nigeria is not liable to pay $1.2 billion according to the agreements signed before the takeoff of the 461 megawatts Azura power plant in Edo state.

truth. “Since the Buhari government had chosen not to repudiate the deal, it went ahead to issue the required legal opinion and signed the World Bank guarantees that had been initiated in April 2014. In fact, the main Power Purchase Agreement was signed in 2013.

Based on the agreement, Nigeria is obligated to pay Azura $30 million monthly with or without power being taken from the generation company, which has placed a heavy financial burden on the country. There is assertion in some quarters that if the country wants to exit from the contract, it will have to pay Azura an estimated $1.2 billion and take over the plant. “Over the past week, there has been an unnecessary controversy about the Azura-Edo Independent Power Project (IPP) especially the concerns about who signed the transaction documents and who did not sign, thus ignoring the consequences of backing out of the agreements by the Federal Government,” he said.

“If at the point the Buhari government came into office, it repudiated the contracts, what would have happened? First, because there was already a valid and binding contract between the Federal Government and Azura-Edo, that would have led to an international case similar to the P&ID scenario. “In the P&ID case, the Federal Government was sued for breaching the terms of a contract to build a gas processing plant. Despite the fact that no part of the plant was ever built and no government or World Bank guarantees were given, the Arbitral Tribunal found Nigeria liable in the sum of $9.6 billion. So, clearly, guarantee is not the issue at stake here,” Zakari said in a statement on Thursday.

“The Azura-Edo IPP is a functional 461MW power plant. It is owned by a group of investors led by an internationally reputed firm – Actis and includes the Edo State government as part of the investment consortium. Today, the plant supplies over 8% of the power on Nigeria’s National Grid. Clearly, the controversy as to who signed the agreements has no real basis, if indeed the only quest is for the plain

He added: “Third, it would definitely have affected our credit rating and credibility as an investment destination. Some of the most reputable international banks and investors that were involved in the project include Development Finance Institutions of the US, UK, France, Germany, the Netherlands and Sweden,” the presidential aide said. “Again, laying out the facts already stated in previous communication

“On October 22, 2014, the second agreement was signed. That is the Put Call Option Agreement (PCOA), which establishes the formula for determining the amount payable by government, if it has to take over the Plant. The PCOA for power plants is actually a novel approach pioneered in Nigeria. It ensures that unlike other contracts where a contract default would trigger penalties alone, in the case of Azura a default would allow Nigeria to purchase the asset. This ensures that the country has a contingent asset alongside a contingent liability. The PCOA approach has now become standard in West Africa and is being adopted across the developing world. “Those who argue that the signing of the World Bank Guarantees makes the Federal Government under Buhari responsible for contracting Azura need only to look at the two basic transaction documents. Another curious mischief in this controversy is the assertion that Nigeria will become liable in the sum of $1.2billion if it defaults on the Azura contract. “Nowhere in any of the documents signed from 2013 to 2015 is any such figure mentioned. The only possible payout indicated in any of the agreements is in case the put and call option is activated. In that event, the cost of the plant would be worked out using a formula and become due for payment, but at least Nigeria will get in return a functional 461MW plant.”

Majorwaves Energy Report AUGUST 2020, Vol 3 No 8

49


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Articles inside

Nigeria to Deliver 5GW Of Electricity By 2022 – NNPC

3min
page 50

Azura Power Deal: Nigeria Not Liable To Pay $1.2bn – Presidential Aide

4min
page 49

Maritime Agencies Adopt Modalities To Address Overlapping Functions

1min
page 48

NIMASA, Customs Collaborate To Plug TIP Loopholes

4min
page 47

NPA Halts Licences Renewal For Shipping Firms Over Holding Bay Crisis

3min
page 46

Samsung To Employ ICT Tools To Improve Shipbuilding In Nigeria

1min
page 45

USTDA Provides Support For New LNG Infrastructure In Nigeria

1min
page 44

Majorwaves Energy Report August 2020

2min
page 43

NNPC, First E&P Announce Arrival of FPSO To Nigeria

2min
page 42

Majorwaves Energy Report August 2020

20min
pages 36-41

More than a glimmer of hope for Jobs, Poverty Eradication

23min
pages 24-32

COVID 19: Oilserv Donates Medical Supplies To Enugu State Government

1min
page 23

Majorwaves Energy Report August 2020

3min
page 22

NCDMB in Equity Investments Agreements With Nigerian Based Firms

1min
page 21

Azikel Modular Refinery In Bayelsa Progresses

3min
pages 20-21

Oilserv, IVM Create Pedestal For Proliferation Of Locally Manufactured Vehicles

5min
pages 18-19

North/East Intervention: NCDMB Receives Report from Aisha Buhari Foundation

3min
page 17

President Buhari Inaugurates Nigerian Content Tower, Pledges More Spend on Job Creation, Infrastructure

4min
pages 15-16

 NNPC Averts $125m Fraud Targeted at FG by Syndicate By Ikenna Omeje

3min
page 13

Shell Trumps Spill Response And Prevention Record In The Niger Delta By Ikenna Omeje

7min
pages 11-12

Shell Trumps Spill Response And Prevention Record In The Niger Delta By Ikenna Omeje

2min
page 11

OPEC+ Plan to Increase Oil Production by August Could Backfire –Rystad By Ikenna Omeje

3min
page 10

NNPC Inks $1.5bn Oil Prepayment Deal With Vitol, Matri

1min
page 9

 DPR boss Charges Nigerian Lubricant Producers to Target Export Market

1min
page 9

Eni Takes Steps to Cut Operation Costs by 1.4bn Euros in 2020 By Jerome Onoja

3min
page 8

Aveon Offshore Successfully Loads-out 300-tonne Topside Module for Anyala West Conductor Supported Platform

1min
page 7

Sylva, Kyari, Wabote hail SEPLAT as pride of indigenous operators, gas revolution strides

3min
pages 6-7

OPEC+ Plan to Increase Oil Production by August Could Backfire –Rystad

16min
pages 10-14

N43.24bn Ibadan Dry Ports Project Goes To FEC Soon

2min
page 43

NIMASA Boss Celebrates Berth Of Largest Container Vessel In Nigeria, Lauds NPA MD

21min
pages 44-52

President Buhari Inaugurates Nigerian Content Tower, Pledges More Spend on Job Creation, Infrastructure

21min
pages 15-22

COVID 19: Oilserv Donates Medical Supplies To Enugu State Government

22min
pages 23-31

Eni Takes Steps to Cut Operation Costs by 1.4bn Euros in 2020

7min
pages 8-9
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