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Overview

China Construction Bank contributes to USD 225 million syndicated loan for working capital purposes for the Sipat Super Thermal Power Plant

Commitments (Constant USD, 2023)$13,194,254
Commitment Year2006Country of ActivityIndiaDirect Recipient Country of IncorporationIndiaSectorEnergyFlow TypeLoan

Status

Project lifecycle

Completion

Pipeline: PledgePipeline: CommitmentImplementationCompletion

Timeline

Key dates

Commitment date
Sep 21, 2006
Start (planned)
Oct 1, 2006
Start (actual)
Oct 25, 2006
End (planned)
Mar 1, 2008
End (actual)
Mar 28, 2008
First repayment (originally scheduled)
Sep 20, 2010
Last repayment (originally scheduled)
Sep 19, 2013

Geospatial footprint

Map overview

Visualizes the AidData-provided feature geometry for this project.

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Sipat Super Thermal Power Plant is located in the Bilaspur district of the state of Chhattisgarh. Kahalgaon Thermal Power Plant in the Bhagalpur district of the state of Bihar. More detailed location information can be found at: https://www.openstreetmap.org/way/248385257, https://www.openstreetmap.org/way/205942949

Stakeholders

Organizations involved in projects and activities supported by financial and in-kind transfers from Chinese government and state-owned entities

Ultimate beneficial owners

At least 25% host country ownership

Funding agencies

State-owned Commercial Banks

  • China Construction Bank Corporation (CCB)

Cofinancing agencies

Private Sector

  • Bank of America Securities Ltd
  • BNP Paribas S.A.
  • Cathay United Bank
  • Chang Hwa Commercial Bank Limited
  • Credit Industriel et Commercial (CIC)
  • Deutsche Pfandbriefbank AG (PBB) (Formerly DEPFA Bank plc)
  • Dexia Crédit Local S.A.
  • DZ Bank AG
  • E.SUN Commercial Bank, Ltd.
  • First Commercial Bank Limited
  • Fortis Bank
  • Intesa Sanpaolo S.P.A. (formerly Cariplo/Banca Intesa/BCI)
  • Malayan Banking Berhad (Maybank)
  • Mega International Commercial Bank Co., Ltd. (formerly International Commercial Bank of China)
  • Mizuho Corporate Bank, Ltd. (MHCB)
  • MUFG Bank, Ltd. (Formerly Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ, Ltd. (BTMU))
  • Société Générale S.A. (SocGen or Societe Generale)
  • Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation (SMBC)
  • The Shanghai Commercial & Savings Bank, Ltd. (SCSB)

State-owned Banks

  • Banca Monte dei Paschi di Siena S.p.A. (MPS) (BMPS)
  • Bank of Taiwan
  • Bayerische Landesbank (BayernLB)
  • Caixa Geral de Depósitos, S.A.
  • Central Trust of China
  • Export-Import Bank of the Republic of China, Taipei
  • KfW IPEX-Bank GmbH
  • Korea Development Bank (KDB)
  • Land Bank of Taiwan Co., Ltd. (LBOT)
  • Taiwan Cooperative Bank
  • WestLB AG
  • Woori Bank Co., Ltd.

Receiving agencies

State-owned companies

  • National Thermal Power Corporation (NTPC)

Loan desecription

China Construction Bank contribution to USD 225 million syndicated loan for working capital purposes for the Sipat Super Thermal Power Plant

Grace period4 yearsGrant element18.0258%Interest rate (t₀)5.42%Interest typeFixed Interest RateMaturity7 years

Narrative

Full Description

Project narrative

On September 21, 2006, National Thermal Power Corporation signed a term facilities agreement worth USD 225 million with 32 international commercial lenders (including China Construction Bank) to provide working capital for the Sipat Super Thermal Power Plant (Sipat STPP), and Kahalgaon Thermal Power Plant (Kahalgaon TPP) coal-fired power plant projects. The agreement was signed as part of a larger non-sovereign loan from the Asian Development Bank (ABD) worth USD 300 million to partially finance the construction of the Sipat STPP and the Kahalgaon TPP. The loan was separated into two tranches; tranche A was worth USD 75 million and was funded by the ADB, while tranche B was worth USD 225 million and was funded by 32 international commercial lenders led by the Bank of America under the ADB's Complementary Financing Scheme. Both tranches derived interest rates from the 6-month USD LIBOR, which as of September 21, 2006 was 5.42%. Tranche A had a maturity of 11 years and a grace period of 7 years; tranche B had a maturity of 7 years and a grace period of 4 years. Tranche B was reportedly oversubscribed by 290%, drawing USD 640 million in funds from over 80 banks. The first disbursement was made on October 25, 2006. The final disbursement was made on March 28, 2008. As of September 30, 2009, the outstanding amount of tranche A was INR 3,643,000,000, while the outstanding amount of tranche B was INR 10,928,000,000. Sipat STPP consisted of two stages; stage I included 3 supercritical units with a total generating capacity of 1,980 MW, while stage II included 2 subcritical units with a total generating capacity of 1,000 MW. Kahalgaon TPP only received financing for its second stage, which consisted of a single subcritical unit capable of generating 500 MW. Sipat STPP stage I units were expected to reach commercial operations date between April 2008 and December 2009, while the stage II units were expected to reach commercial operations date between June and December of 2007. In reality, the stage I units reached commercial operations date on October 1, 2011, May 25, 2012, and August 1, 2012. The stage II units reached commercial operations date on June 30, 2008, and January 1, 2009. Kahalgaon TPP stage II was expected to reach commercial operations date in March 2007, but actually reached commercial operations on March 20, 2010. Plant performance of all units following commercial operations date has been deemed satisfactory.

Staff comments

1. The Asian Development Bank Project Number is 39916-014; the Asian Development Bank Loan Number is 2249. 2. The individual contribution of China Construction Bank to the USD 225 million syndicated loan are unknown. For the time being, AidData estimates that each organization involved in the loan agreement contributed equal amounts (USD 7,031,250). 3. Since the loan agreement was signed, Banca Intesa merged with Sanpaolo IMI to become Intesa Sanpaolo. 4. Some sources report the repayment period as falling between August 14, 2010 and August 14, 2013 (see page 290; http://www.cmlinks.com/pub/dp/dp12001.pdf). 5. The agreement initially proposed by the Asian Development Bank included a grace period of up to 4 years for Tranche B of the loan agreement (see page 29; https://www.adb.org/sites/default/files/project-documents//39916-ind-rrp.pdf). This appears to have been included in the finalized loan agreement (see page 290; http://www.cmlinks.com/pub/dp/dp12001.pdf). 6. The loan carried an interest rate of 6-month LIBOR. The average 6-month LIBOR rate on September 21, 2006 was 5.42%.