A collection of resources and articles on the development and financing of power, energy, and infrastructure projects on the African continent.


Private Investment in Transmission

A collection of materials on private investment in power transmission.

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Getting Nigerian Oil and Gas Deals Done in a Shifting Regulatory Landscape

Host governments have long scrutinized transactions to buy or sell oil and gas assets. After all, those assets may be a critical state resource, and oil and gas operations can give rise to significant environmental risks. In African countries, however, there is a developing trend for increased governmental intervention in transactions as regulatory regimes become more sophisticated and are modernized to address environmental, and wider ESG, concerns.

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Equity investments in privately held companies

The rights of a minority shareholder in a private company will depend on a number of factors, including the provisions of applicable law and the relative bargaining strength and expertise of the parties. In this article, partner James Comyn considers the sources of those rights and typical investor rights at differing levels of equity ownership.

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Nuclear Power Programmes: Presented to the African Legal Support Facility (ALSF)

In this presentation, Hunton attorneys Jason Parker, George Borovas and Yousef Shakah discuss how to establish effective legal and regulatory frameworks in Africa, Africa’s commercial nuclear sector, and the lessons learned from developing new nuclear projects.

This presentation was presented to the African Legal Support Facility (ALSF), a public international institution hosted by the African Development Bank (AfDB) Group.

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In-Depth Explainer on Energy Storage Revenue and Effects on Financing

Battery energy storage projects create a range of revenue streams by serving a number of purposes for utilities and other consumers of electricity. Owners of batteries, including storage facilities with solar or wind projects obtain revenue under a multitude of contracts.

In this article, partner Michael Klaus provides an overview of the revenue models for non-residential energy storage projects and the process for financing parties as they evaluate the variety of sources of revenue.

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Mini-grids – private investment requires robust legal frameworks

Extending main grids is no longer the most cost-effective way to connect around half a billion people to reliable electricity.  In many cases, mini-grids can provide more reliable electricity at lower cost.  To promote sustainable investments, legal frameworks should address a number of issues that are specific to mini-grids.

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Hydroelectric IPPs – Addressing Hydrological Risks in a Rapidly Changing World

As climate change begins affecting the hydrology of hydroelectric projects, a framework for enhancing the climate resilience of both new and operating projects is emerging. Enhancing the climate resilience of existing projects and new projects – after they have entered commercial operations – may require significant project adaptations. The commercial implications of these adaptations are rarely properly addressed by the project agreements. When structuring new projects, project participants should consider increasing the level of attention they devote to the commercial implications that may arise if project adaptations are required during the operational phase of the project.

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The ESG Attributes of Nuclear Energy

Although nuclear energy is arguably one of the cleanest and most sustainable sources of energy, funds that select investments based in part on their ESG attributes rarely consider nuclear energy an investible asset class.  The outperformance of nuclear energy on a number of ESG criteria should lead to funds (and investors) to reconsider their position on whether nuclear energy belongs in portfolios selected on the basis of their ESG attributes.

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PPP Project Finance Webinar Series

In this three part webinar series hosted by the Commercial Law Development Program of the U.S. Department of Commerce, a panel that includes James Head discusses various models a host government may use to raise financing for large infrastructure projects, including how to unlock the benefits of limited recourse financing by developing the project as a public private partnership with a bankable allocation of risks.

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How Tax Treaties Prevent Tax Leakage in Cross-Border Projects

Although what tax treaties do — which is to allocate taxing rights between two jurisdictions — might sound mundane, their potential for positive effect on cross-border transactions should not be underestimated.

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Tariff Structures for Large Scale Hydroelectric IPPs

The structure of tariffs for large hydroelectric IPPs has a significant impact on the bankability of these projects. Discover a few options for structuring bankable tariffs for both storage and run of river hydroelectric projects.

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Calculating Termination Payments and Purchase Prices 

This article examines a few methodologies that can be used to calculate the purchase prices that become payable upon the exercise of a put option or call option under a PCOA, or the termination payments that become payable upon the termination of a power purchase agreement, concession, or other project contracts.

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Public Private Partnerships: Financing and Finance Documents – Pre-Recorded Webinar

In this webinar hosted by the Commercial Law Development Program of the U.S. Department of Commerce, a panel that includes Alex Evans of the Development Finance Corporation, Justin Pavry of CDC Group Plc., and Ryan Ketchum review financing structures for infrastructure projects involving private sector participation and the finance documents that are involved in those financing structures.

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Why Emerging Market Governments May Prefer Put & Call Option Agreements Over Sovereign Guarantees

Clients often ask us why an emerging market government tendering a PPP may prefer to use a put & call option agreement (a “PCOA”) to provide sovereign credit support for an offtaker’s or contracting authority’s obligations instead of a sovereign guarantee.  This note examines five of the most commonly cited reasons that a government may prefer to offer a PCOA instead of a guarantee.

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Negotiating Direct Agreements

Direct Agreements are used to enhance a lenders’ security in a project-financed transaction and are typically required by lenders financing a large infrastructure project. Step-in and novation rights are often misunderstood by contract counterparties. See how they work and get to know the key negotiation points.

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Renewable Energy (Ethiopia, 2020), Getting the Deal Through

A survey of the law and practice governing the development and financing of renewable energy projects in Ethiopia.

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Renewable Energy (Nepal, 2020), Getting the Deal Through

A survey of the law and practice governing the development and financing of renewable energy projects in Nepal.

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Reducing the risk of liability, fines and penalties under the FCPA and the Bribery Act

The last decade has seen intense enforcement activity by financial services regulators on both sides of the Atlantic as the fallouts of the global financial crisis still continue to fully unravel.

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Are Local Currency Power Purchase Agreements Better for Offtakers?

The sustained collapse of commodities prices since the 2008 financial crisis has placed the currencies of many emerging market countries – including several countries that are actively procuring additional generation capacity by entering into long-term Power Purchase Agreements (PPAs) with independent power projects (IPPs) – under significant pressure.

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Looking Toward Project Bonds For African Infrastructure, Law360

The infrastructure deficit is increasing in many countries in sub-Saharan Africa. A much-needed priority action plan, Programme for Infrastructure Development in Africa, has been developed by the African Union Commission, African Development Bank and the New Partnership for African Development Planning and Coordinating Agency. The priority action plan aims to address the problematic deficit by identifying $68 billion per year of energy and infrastructure investments that should be prioritized through 2020.

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Cooperation amid conflict, IFC's Handshake

It’s not impossible for nations in conflict to put aside their differences to coordinate the delivery of natural resources, but it’s unusual. For the Democratic Republic of Congo, Rwanda, and Burundi, cooperation is transforming the shared Ruzizi River into a valuable source of hydropower for three peoples.

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A Role for PPPs in African infrastructure, This Is Africa

Scaling up financing from the traditional sources of taxes, government borrowing, and aid will not be adequate to successfully address Africa's infrastructure gap.

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Financing Hydropower in Africa, Energy World

Africa has the potential to increase electricity access through a greater use of hydropower. Here, Ryan T Ketchum describes a hydro project planned for the Ruzizi River, and details how the project will work commercially.

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Developing Bujagali, the Largest Private Sector Investment in Uganda, HydroWorld.com

The 250 MW Bujagali project in Uganda is providing electricity in a vastly underserved market while boosting economic return for the entire country. This example of private sector investment in developing countries can be expanded throughout the world.

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Fuel for Thought, PPP Bulletin

Uganda’s $900m Bujagali Hydroelectric project has proved that tariff regulation by contract can now be applied to other power PPPs in the region.

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Featured Insights

Understanding Energy Storage
Understanding Energy Storage

Understanding Power Purchase Agreements, Second Edition
Understanding Power Purchase Agreements, Second Edition

Understanding Power Project Financing
Understanding Power Project Financing

Understanding Power Project Procurement
Understanding Power Project Procurement

Understanding Power Transmission Financing
Understanding Power Transmission Financing

Decommissioning Hydrocarbon Assets
Decommissioning Hydrocarbon Assets—Finding Value in a Shifting Regulatory Landscape

Resource Financed Infrastructure
Resource Financed Infrastructure: A Discussion on a New Form of Infrastructure Financing

Competitive Tenders for IPPs in Africa
Competitive Tenders for IPPs in Africa—A Practical Guide


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