ECONOMIC AND FINANCIAL CRISIS ON POWER SECTOR INVESTMENTS IN LCR

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ASSESSING THE IMPACT OF THE ECONOMIC AND FINANCIAL CRISIS ON POWER SECTOR INVESTMENTS IN LCR COLOMBIA, PERU and JAMAICA Sustainable Development Department LCR - Energy Unit The World Bank

Outline Introduction Methodology Impact of the crisis Electricity it demand d growth Financing Conclusions Annexes Annex 1: Challenges in Developing the Study Annex 2: Economic Context Annex 3: Power Market Events and Issues Annex 4: Generation Expansion and Investment Needs 2

Introduction Three case studies: Colombia, Jamaica & Peru Different context from first round of studies (East Asia late 2008): Post-crisis scenario well defined Power market model in Colombia and Peru: no central expansion and investment generation planning, no public investment plans, strong private companies and SOEs run as commercial enterprises Power market model in Jamaica: single buyer w/ competitive generation, centralized expansion planning with government regulator 3

Methodology 1. Impact of the crisis on demand scenarios and short and medium term investment plans 2. Potential financing needs for existing and future power projects 3. Identification of possible interventions 4

Impact of the crisis 5

Electricity demand growth Colombia Jamaica Peru Decreases in the growth rate of demand were observed in Colombia and Peru but not in Jamaica. The deceleration of demand growth was moderate in Colombia but more pronounced in Peru. Demand Growth Pre-crisis During crisis Post-crisis Comments 4.0% 1.4% 4.0% 0.9% 0.9% 1.1% 8.0% 0.5% 3.3% 2-year delay in demand by 2016 Generation Retirement postponed 2-3 years 1-year delay in demand by 2016 The variance across the three cases reveals the importance of understanding di the country context. 6

Context for demand growth Colombia: Drop in economic growth in 2009 had significant impact on electricity demand; recovery already ongoing in 2010. Jamaica: Demand growth subdued even before the global crisis. Additionally, mining industry is self-generating: its collapse during the crisis did not have any impact on public service demand. Peru: Near double-digit growth in lead-up to crisis. Electricity demand d growth rate reduced d by lower activity in mining industry. 7

Impact of the Crisis on the Financing of Power Sector Investments Impact on financing Colombia Market for syndicated loans closed in late 2008, was thin and very expensive in 2009 Credit from international banks unavailable in 2008 and 2009 Project finance not an attractive option for hydroelectric projects Balance sheet financing more attractive for established companies Financing for generation continued mostly through balance sheet, using domestic corporate bond di issues (AAA rating of SOEs and private companies) Jamaica Peru Foreign exchange shortage limited financing for on going operations Financial constraints created a virtual halt to new investment in the sector Renewable Energy program slashed from US$150 million to US$20 million due to IFIs scaling back their investments Main private power producer (with monopoly on T&D) seeking US$100 mm in long term debt in 2008 secured just US$40 mm Low investment cost gas fired plants were developed using balance sheet financing in the domestic capital market Kallpa Thermal Project financial structuring (US$ 400mn project finance scheme) experienced completion difficulty due to less favorable financial conditions Domestic capital market became a major source of financing in 2009 for new generation projects Project finance an option due to the establishment tof long term contracts t for generation 8

Conclusions 9

Conclusions (1) Colombia Peru Jamaica Impact of Limited impact due to high institutional quality : solid Significant impact: reduced the crisis macroeconomic fundamentals, stable and predictable institutional and regulatory framework, and financially strong and operationally efficient agents Tightening of financial conditions made it more difficult to use project availability and increased cost of financing: a deterrent for investors Risk of supply crisis by 2014. finance, in particular for hydro projects Domestic bond markets became an important source of financing Terms of contracting for equipment /civil works improved Development of 2,400 MW hydro project using BOMT is at risk. Fall in electricity demand growth averted expected supply crisis in 2009, but demand-supply balance 2012-13 may be tight Pre-crisis structural issues with financing of hydro projects exacerbated Project finance an option since reform established obligation for consumers to enter into long term contracts with generators Replacement of inefficient diesel-based units deferred. Renewable Energy/Energy Efficiency program considerably scaled down (by US$130 mm) Reduction in electricity production cost and CO2 emissions postponed 10

Conclusions (2) Proposed WBG Interventions Colombia Peru Jamaica Review of gas regulatory framework (TA) Help to reach financial closure of the 2,400 MW hydro project Help the Government optimize domestic resources including hydroelectricity and gas (TA) Mobilize LT financing for renewable energy projects (implementation of private projects through direct lending by private arms of IFIs and lending to the Government to optimize financial conditions). Recourse financing for IPPs (IFC, MIGA), partial risk guarantees (WB) Support EE and RE program through: (i) revolving credit, (ii) access to CF, GEF (project under preparation) Support implementation of Government policy of diversification through LNG, energy security (EE, RE) and institutional strengthening (project under preparation) 11

Annex 1: Challenges in Developing the Study 12

Challenges in Developing the Study It was difficult to obtain information on investment programs and financing terms Risk was anticipated, due to the structure and nature of agents operating power sectors characterized ed by: Significant presence of private companies State-owned enterprises (SOEs) running as fully commercial entities In Jamaica, no recently updated expansion plan Mitigation Strategy: Project team involving v senior consultants s and senior Bank staff with direct knowledge of and contacts in the sector Interview the highest number of stakeholders to maximize representativeness ese ess and accuracy acy of information o gathered ed 13

Annex 2: Economic Context 14

Economic o c Context (1) International crisis hit hard in the Latin America and Caribbean region in late 2008 and early 2009 High rates of GDP growth in 2007 collapsed in 2009 Economic recovery started in late 2009 A broad recovery is taking place in 2010 15

Economic Context (2) Colombia Increased domestic security and > 5% GDP growth in 2002-2007 Growth slowed down in early 2008 0.1% GDP growth in 2009 Inflation reduced from 7.7% to 2% in 2009 Economic recovery: est.2.5% GDP growth in 2010, 3.8% in 2011 Peru One of the best performers in LAC: 8%-10% GDP growth since 2006 Investment grade in 2008 0.8% GDP growth in 2009 Economic recovery: est.6% GDP growth in 2010 Jamaica Subdued economic growth since 2005 GDP fell 3.5% in 2009, driven by drop in remittances and in mining revenues Inflation increased to +15% p.a. 2008-09 Tepid economic recovery expected: -1.1% 1% GDP growth in 2010, 0.6% 2011 High debt level and large fiscal deficit 16

Annex 3: Power Market Events and Issues 17

Power Market Events and Issues: Colombia Colombia Impact of natural gas Second generation reforms Issues Dash for gas in late 1990 s 2,757 MW in gas-fired plants Gas no longer an option to increase capacity (limited reserves) Administrated capacity payment replaced by firm energy market in 2006. Centralized auction to procure firm energy obligations Gas market failed in 2009 and does not seem to provide adequate incentives for expanding transportation capacity and supply 18

Power Market Events and Issues: Jamaica Structure t Jamaica Former state-owned vertically integrated utility (JPS) equitized and 80% of shares sold to private agents. It owns 76% of generation and has a monopoly over transmission and distribution in the country Three private IPPs: JEP (126 MW), JPPC (60 MW), Wigton Wind Farm (20 MW) Bauxite/Aluminum industry self generating for own electricity consumption (not relying on public service) Heavy dependence on fossil fuels (oil products) Institutional and Regulatory framework Only 5% generation from renewables (RE) Changes in fuel prices directly transferred to customers High number of institutions involved in the sector Recently created regulatory authority in consolidation process 19

Power Market Events and Issues: Peru Impact of natural gas Second generation reforms Issues Peru Cheap gas from Camisea field available in 2004 caused a sharp change in the energy matrix 1,800 MW in gas-fired plants Existing Camisea gas fields could only support 2,400 MW in new plants Reforms adopted 2006 Obligation for long-term contracts to meet demand Centralized transmission planning Reliance on gas-fired generation is not sustainable in the long-term: renewable energy needed d Barriers for developing substantial hydro potential: gas prices do not reflect opportunity costs and price caps for new supply contracts may under-compensate for project risks and costs 20

Annex 4: Generation Expansion and Investment Needs 21

Post-crisis Investment Plans => Indicative generation expansion plans Colombia: Generation expansion already defined: projects under construction and firm energy obligations awarded Jamaica: New generation expansion (150MW) delayed until 2015-2017 Peru: Only app. 40% of 2010-14 14 capacity under construction or identified ifi d 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 Colombia Jamaica Peru Size Investment Size Investment Size Investment (MW) (US$ million) (MW) (US$ million) (MW) (US$ million) 10 24 560 243 273 480 50 75 360 245 45 108 1128 1045 1220 2217 11 27 1680 1389 0 0 254 383 Total 1853 2942 66 159 3672 3135 22

Funding Power Investments Post-crisis Colombia Jamaica Private generators confident funding US$1 billion in hydro projects with corporate bonds and IFI loans, backed by balance sheet (same reasons that made it possible during the crisis) Financing 2,400 MW hydro project under BOMT scheme is at risk due to financial i crisis ii and drop in demandd LNG terminal (currently under review) necessary to develop generation expansion plan post-crisis. Jamaica Energy Partners 60 MW interim capacity addition suffering from a lack of financing. MDBs and IFIs concerned about over-exposure to sector Generation re-powering investments likely to be pursued to avoid supply shortage in medium term Peru eu Private investor expects to fund US$300 million investment e in168 MW hydro project in domestic market and IFI loans using project-finance New generation projects with long-term contracts awarded in 2010 could be candidates for project finance 23