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African Development Bank contributes to Mozambique LNG financing

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LNG Industry,


The African Development Bank has concluded its bid to co-finance the construction of Mozambique’s integrated LNG plant by signing a senior loan of US$400 million for the transformational project.

The Mozambique LNG Area 1 Project, estimated to cost over US$20 billion, is ranked Africa’s single largest foreign direct investment to date. It comprises a global team of energy developers and operators, led by Total alongside Mitsui, Oil India, ONGC Videsh Limited, Bharat Petroleum, PTT Exploration, as well as Mozambique’s national oil and gas company, ENH.

With the signing on 15 July, the African Development Bank joins a global syndicate of commercial banks, development finance institutions, and export credit agencies to provide the requisite financing for the project. Financial close is expected later in 2020.

The project, which benefits from one of the world’s largest natural gas reserves off the coast of northern Mozambique, will be the country’s first LNG development. It will initially consist of two LNG trains with a total capacity of around 13 million tpy.

As well as being transformational for the energy sector in Mozambique, the project is expected to have broader socio-economic benefits for the country.

“Signing the Mozambique LNG Area 1 agreement heralds a new age of industrialisation for Mozambique,” said Abdu Mukhtar, the Director of the African Development Bank’s Industrial & Trade Development Department. He noted that gas purchasers, such as fertilizer plants, had the potential for improving regional and global competitiveness.

The project comprises both onshore and offshore components, which will be funded by a combination of equity, pre-completion cashflows and over US$14 billion in senior debt facilities. The senior debt consists of a mix of Export Credit Agency (ECA) direct loans, commercial bank loans, and the facility from the African Development Bank, the only multilateral development institution involved in the project’s first phase.

Wale Shonibare, the African Development Bank’s Director for Energy Financial Solutions, Policy and Regulation, said the project would create a new energy model in Mozambique and help to electrify Southern Africa. “Through the availability of domestic gas, the project stands to facilitate the development of gas-fired electricity in Mozambique. This will play a key role in providing reliable and affordable energy for the country and the wider region,” said Shonibare.

Read the article online at: https://www.lngindustry.com/liquid-natural-gas/21072020/african-development-bank-contributes-to-mozambique-lng-financing/

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