Tag Archives: IFI

Kyrgyzstan secures $1.7b loan to push CASA-1000 forward

MAY 5 2016, BISHKEK (The Conway Bulletin)  — Despite securing a $1.7b finance deal to boost its power generating sector, Kyrgyzstan still has its work cut out to ensure that it can hit targets laid out in the ambitious CASA-1000 project which aims to send Tajik and Kyrgyz electricity to Pakistan and India, analysts said.

Next week heads of state from Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Afghanistan and Pakistan are due in Dushanbe to officially launch CASA-1000, heralded as a new epoch in Central Asia and South Asia trade relations.

And Kyrgyzstan’s $1.7b credit line, organised last week with the Islamic Development Bank, the International Development Association and the European Investment Bank, has come only just in time.

Kyrgyzstan needs the cash to bolster its power generating capacity which has faltered over the past six months. In December 2015, transmission line faults damaged the 1,200MW Toktogul power plant, which generates 40% of Kyrgyzstan’s electricity. The outage triggered shortages and worried senior officials in the Kyrgyz government and their international partners.

At the same time, Russia pulled out of a $2b deal to build a dam and a 2,000MW power station at Kambar-Ata, on the Naryn river in central Kyrgyzstan, because a recession had sucked dry its funds.

Marat Kazakbayev, a political analyst based in Bishkek said Kyrgyzstan can currently meet its export demands but at a heavy cost.

“Electricity exports may be carried out at the expense of domestic electricity supply for the population of Kyrgyzstan,” he said.

For Kyrgyzstan, though, CASA- 1000 is a headline project that it simply must make work. The $1.2b project, backed by the World Bank, has been touted as a regional trade deal that will create wealth in mountainous Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan, which have large power generating systems through their network of hydropower dams, and light houses and office blocks in Pakistan where electricity is in short supply.

The United States also views the project as an important way to lock Afghanistan into a global trade system and for it to generate some revenue as a transit country.

Still, as Indra Overland, research professor at the Norwegian Institute of International Affairs, said, even with the $1.7b loan secured, there is no guarantee that Kyrgyzstan’s power sector will be running at capacity by the time CASA-1000 is supposed to start in 2018.

“Kyrgyzstan has a problem of suboptimal internal organisation, lack of good governance,” he said. “It has plenty of hydropower potential to produce enough electricity for itself and for export. It should be a surplus country, but its infrastructure is lagging behind.”

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(News report from Issue No. 279, published on May 6 2016)

 

Ex-Kazakh CBank chief buys bank stake

APRIL 29 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – Grigory Marchenko, former chief of Kazakhstan’s Central Bank, bought an 8.3% stake in AGBank, a private bank in Azerbaijan. Chingiz Asadullayev, the bank’s chairman, increased his stake to 31.7%, up from 23.3%. The World Bank’s International Financial Corporation decreased its stake from 17.5% to 4.3%. Mr Marchenko left his post at Kazakhstan’s Central Bank in October 2013. Since leaving the role, Mr Marchenko has kept a low profile.

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(News report from Issue No. 279, published on  May 6 2016)

 

WB approves loan for Armenian power companies

APRIL 29 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – The World Bank approved a $30m loan to aid Armenia’s troubled power sector. The aim of the project is to give credit to state- owned power generation companies which have been losing money and rung up millions of dollars in debt. The Armenian Nuclear Power Plant (ANPP) has accumulated a deficit of $104m. Power generation, and how to pay for electricity, are sensitive subjects in the region.

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(News report from Issue No. 279, published on May 6 2016)

 

Tajik Nurek needs cash injection

APRIL 29 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – Tajik President Emomali Rakhmon said that modernisation work at the Nurek hydropower plant needed an additional 4.7b somoni (around $600 million). The government has worked on the modernisation of the plant with the World Bank. The Nurek station has a total capacity of 3,000 MW and produces over 70% of Tajikistan’s electricity.

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(News report from Issue No. 278, published on April 29 2016)

 

EBRD invests in Kazakh trucks

APRIL 27 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – The EBRD paid €3.3m ($3.8) to become a shareholder in Globaltruck Kazakhstan, a truck operating group. Globaltruck is registered in Cyprus and owns Longrun Asia a start-up trucking company in Kazakhstan. Longrun Asia will use Globaltruck’s equity funds of €10m ($11.4m) to buy up to 300 trucks and trailers.

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(News report from Issue No. 278, published on  April 29 2016)

 

Chinese institution to fund road projects in Kazakhstan and Tajikistan

APRIL 19 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – The AIIB, a China-backed international financial institution, said it would fund road projects in Tajikistan and Kazakhstan. According to unnamed sources quoted in the FT, the AIIB will join an EBRD-funded road project in Dushanbe and a World Bank and EBRD-backed ring road project in Almaty. The AIIB has said it is keen to fund infrastructure upgrades within its Silk Road project.

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(News report from Issue No. 277, published on April 22 2016)

ADB says that Turkmenistan’s TAPI pipeline is ‘doable’

APRIL 8 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – The Asian Development Bank (ADB) said it will support infrastructure projects in Turkmenistan, including the $10b TAPI gas pipeline and also rail and electricity links to neighbouring countries.

Over the next two years, the ADB plans to invest around $1b on construction of railway corridors and the production and supply of electricity.

On TAPI, the pipeline that should, if all goes to plan, pump Turkmen gas to India through Afghanistan and Pakistan by 2019, the ADB delivered a determined, positive endorsement.

“We’re going through some of the toughest territory in Afghanistan, so the challenge is there. There’s no doubt about it,” Sean O’Sullivan, director for Central Asia at the ADB, told Reuters the day after a $200m investment deal was signed for TAPI between its key shareholders — Turkmenistan, Afghanistan, Pakistan and India.

“But I am sure it’s doable.”

The ADB has been a staunch defender of the TAPI pipeline, which many analysts have said is too complicated to pull off successfully, and advised the partners on the financing of the $10b project.

Previously, the ADB pulled funding from the Turkmenistan-Afghanistan-Tajikistan railway link, because of security concerns. Now, by saying that TAPI is “doable”, Mr O’Sullivan is effectively giving the ADB’s endorsement to the project, despite ongoing doubts on security guarantees.

In the meantime, construction work continued on TAPI, with Turkmen officials triumphantly announced that they had finished welding the first kilometre of the pipeline.

The other countries have reportedly started construction work too.

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(News report from Issue No. 276, published on April 15 2016)

 

Azerbaijan’s SOCAR applies to ADB for Shah Deniz loan

MARCH 28 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – Azerbaijan’s state-owned energy company SOCAR said it applied for a $450m loan from the Asian Development Bank (ADB) to help pay for the expansion of its Shah Deniz gas project.

The loan, according to both ADB and SOCAR, is aimed at financing the second phase of the project, which the company plans to bring online by 2018. Shah Deniz is core to Azerbaijan’s future gas plans.

BP, which develops the field together with SOCAR, said the expansion of the Shah Deniz project will cost around $28b and will add 16b cubic metres annually to the current production of around 10b cubic metres.

Gas produced at Shah Deniz 2 is already booked for export to Georgia and Turkey in 2018 and further on to Europe by 2019, with the completion of the Southern Gas Corridor.

Unnamed ADB sources told Natural Gas Europe: “It is in the processing stage. Once approved, the loan will be provided under the state guarantees.”

There was no information on the timeline of the loan.

SOCAR, hit by sustained low oil prices, has applied to various sources for financing and has sought to divest from some of its unprofitable ventures to raise cash for its core projects.

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(News report from Issue No. 274, published on  April 1 2016)

 

Carrefour extends its presence in Georgia

MARCH 17 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – The EBRD said it extended a $39.5m credit line to Majid Al Futtaim, the regional franchisee of French retailer Carrefour, to extend its presence in Georgia. Carrefour already has three stores in Georgia and said it wants to open new ones. Carrefour is also present in Armenia, where it owns one store, Tajikistan and also in Kazakhstan.

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(News report from Issue No. 272, published on  March 18 2016)

Uzbekistan finishes railway

FEB. 25 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – Uzbek officials said that work on a $1.63b railway section in the Fergana Valley had been completed, meaning that trains can now travel from Tashkent without having to pass through Tajikistan.

Although the cost of the 123km track is high, driven up by kilometres of tunnels and bridges that were needed to breach the mountainous terrain, for Uzbekistan cutting out the irritation of having to deal with Tajikistan makes it worth it.

Uzbekistan and Tajikistan have been at loggerheads since the breakup of the Soviet Union in 1991.

At its core, Uzbekistan worried about Tajik plans to build hydropower dams across rivers that feed Uzbekistan’s cotton crops. Tajikistan doesn’t like Uzbekistan’s unilateral stance.

This impacted rail traffic, which steadily dropped off.

The World Bank estimated the route will transport 600,000 people and 5 tonnes of freight every year. The project also underlines the financial might of China in the region. It paid $350m of the cost of the project, the World Bank paid $190m and the Uzbek government covered the rest.

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(News report from Issue No. 269, published on Feb. 26 2016)