By
Lenie Lectura- February
6, 2019
FOLLOWING the
$225 million worth of green bonds raised last week, AC Energy Inc. announced
investments from two large multilateral agencies last Monday night.
The power arm of
conglomerate Ayala Corp. said the International Finance Corp. (IFC) provided an
investment of $75 million.
IFC’s investment raises
AC Energy’s five-year green bonds to $300 million. Last January 30, AC Energy
raised $225 million. The five-year bonds carry a coupon rate of 4.75 percent
per annum, and will mature in five years. It was listed on the Singapore Stock
Exchange (SGX-ST).
AC Energy’s wholly
owned unit AC Energy Finance International Ltd. issued the bonds, which were
guaranteed by the former.
Moreover, Asian
Development Bank (ADB) invested $20 million in AC Energy’s maiden climate-bond
issuances.
This, after AC
Energy completed a $110-million private placement of 10-year bonds with a
coupon rate of 5.25 percent. The ADB is an anchor investor in the 10-year bonds
that will also be listed on SGX-ST.
Both the five-year and
10-year bonds, totaling $410 million, are the first Climate Bond certified,
publicly listed green bond in Southeast Asia. The certification provides
assurance that the proceeds will be used to finance projects and assets that
are consistent with delivering a low-carbon and climate-resilient economy.
Proceeds will be used for AC Energy’s renewables expansion around the region
including the Philippines, Indonesia and Vietnam.
“AC Energy’s inaugural
public placement of green bond opens the door to a wider investor base and
enables our renewable-energy investments. It also crystallizes our commitment
to sustainable growth,” AC Energy President Eric Francia said.
Director General of
ADB’s Private Sector Operations Department Michael Barrow said the green bond
will contribute to Asean’s target of drawing 23 percent of its energy mix from
modern, clean and sustainable renewable sources by 2025.
“AC Energy aspires to
be a regional leader in renewable energy in Southeast Asia, and ADB is
delighted to support the Ayala Group’s efforts to crowd in other investors,”
Barrow said.
IFC, meanwhile, said
its partnership with the Ayala group successfully mobilized substantial
international investment in the public placement of AC Energy’s five-year
bond.
“This demonstrates the
excellent potential of the green-bond asset class as a tool for mobilizing
international institutional capital into infrastructure assets, and we look
forward to expanding our support of such issuances across Asia, advancing the
integration of regional power and financial markets,” IFC’s Director for East
Asia and the Pacific Vivek Pathak said.
AC Energy said its
green bond framework sets out well-defined guidelines for the use of proceeds
for renewable- energy projects, with comprehensive monitoring and reporting
commitments.
In 2018, AC Energy
generated 2,800 GWh of attributable energy, of which 48 percent was from
renewable sources. AC Energy’s 2025 goal is to reach 5 GW of renewable-energy
capacity, with renewables contributing at least 50 percent of total energy
output.
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