By Esther Nakkazi
Uganda’s Bujagali Hydropower Project has been approved as a
Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) and sustainable development project by the
Netherlands, the designated Authority for this activity.
As a CDM it could earn about $17 million per year from
selling certified emission reduction (CER) credits to industrialized countries,
as part of their emission reduction targets, under the Kyoto Protocol of the UN
framework Convention for climate change.
“It is like a thank you on a project that will save the
environment not only on site but on electricity usage as pressure on the
environment will be reduced. It will also earn us some revenue,” said Mr.
Bukenya Matovu the head of communications in the Ministry of Energy and Mineral
Development.
Under the deal, the Uganda Government will receive 60
percent of the carbon credit income and 40 percent will go to Bujagali Energy
Limited (BEL) the project sponsor which will also control the revenue.
The 250-megawatt project is the largest private investment
ever in East Africa, and now becomes the only capital-intensive project in
Africa to be financed through carbon credit income, a key decision that equity
financiers of the project considered before financing the project.
Investment experts say it is now common international
practice that hydropower projects apply for CDM validation as it presents
investors especially in poor investment climates like Uganda with additional
financial incentive and security through the carbon credit revenue stream.
In the Bujagali case it was a key factor in the decision to
invest made by Sithe Global, the main shareholder in BEL and equity investor in
the project.
BEL is a project- specific company owned by Industrial
Promotion Services
Kenya Limited (IPS Kenya) and SG Bujagali Holdings Ltd, an
affiliate of Sithe Global, an American power company majority owned by private
equity giant, The Blackstone Group based in the USA.
According to the ERM Group, the world’s largest provider of
environment, health and safety certification, Bujagali qualifies to be a CDM
because of the technology applied- hydropower replacing fossil fuel electricity
generation.
The technology will result in reductions of greenhouse gas
emissions in Uganda particularly targeting CO2 emissions that in the absence of
the project activity would have been generated by diesel and heavy fuel oil
generators. It will also avoid the need for future oil fired generation, says
the ERM Group validation report released this month.
The project will also not create emissions as it is a
renewable energy (hydropower) project, and has no fossil-fuelled power to
supply to the grid. If at all, from the two emergency stand-by diesel
generators on site, the annual diesel would be less than 1 percent of emissions
reduction, a reasonable amount, according to ERM certification and verification
services (ERM CVS).
Bujagali hydropower project has a total installed capacity
of 250 MW and is estimated to be fully operational by June 2012 to generate
1,305 GWh (net) per year to the electricity grid.
According to ERM CVS, the Bujagali CER revenue presents to
the Uganda government a secure stream of revenue that will provide a buffer
from the foreign exchange rate risk and from the default on its commitments to
purchase electricity from BEL.
The carbon credit revenue for Bujagali will be in foreign
currencies either US $ or Euros which will help the government offset the
foreign currency exchange risks associated with meeting the electricity
payments that it faces.
The Power Purchase Agreement spells out that Uganda
Electricity Transmission Company (UETCL), purchases from BEL all power produced
by the Bujagali Project, under a sovereign guarantee by the government of
Uganda.
But, Ugandan consumers pay for electricity in Uganda
shillings while BEL to be paid $116 million per year after the project starts
running- is paid in US Dollars, which creates an exchange rate risk for the
government as the Uganda shilling fluctuates significantly against the US
dollar. For instance the shilling declined in value against the US $ by about
50 percent since 2000.
CDM is the main source of income for the UNFCCC Adaptation
Fund. The project was validated on its project design documents,
site assessments and resolution of outstanding issues.
ends
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