Project ID: 34773

China Eximbank provides $41 million buyer’s credit loan for Huambo and Bié Agricultural School Construction Project (Linked to Project ID#42029, #34795)

Commitment amount

$ 88993492.87519358

Adjusted commitment amount

$ 88993492.88

Constant 2021 USD

Summary

Funding agency [Type]

Export-Import Bank of China (China Eximbank) [State-owned Policy Bank]

Recipient

Angola

Sector

Education (Code: 110)

Flow type

Loan

Level of public liability

Central government debt

Infrastructure

Yes

Category

Intent

Mixed (The next section lists the possible statuses.)

Commercial

Development

Representational

Mixed

Financial Flow Classification

OOF-like (The next section lists the possible statuses.)

Official Development Assistance

Other Official Flows

Vague (Official Finance)

Flows categorized based on OECD-DAC guidelines

Project lifecycle

Status

Completion (The next section lists the possible statuses.)

Pledge

Commitment

Implementation

Completion

Suspended

Cancelled

Milestones

Commitment

2005-03-01

Actual start

2005-11-19

Planned complete

2007-08-20

Actual complete

2008-02-07

NOTE: Red circles denote delays between planned and actual dates

Geography

Description

On November 28, 2003, the Chinese Government and the Angolan Government signed a framework agreement pertaining to a special economic cooperation arrangement (Agreement name in Chinese: 中华人民共和国商务部与安哥拉共和国财政部关于两国经贸合作特殊安排的框架协议). Following the signing of the framework agreement, on March 2, 2004, China Eximbank entered into a $2 billion Master Loan Facility Agreement (MLFA) with the Government of Angola. All borrowings under the MLFA, which is an oil prepayment facility, carried the following borrowing terms: a 21.5 maturity, a 1.5 year grace period, an interest rate of 3-month LIBOR plus a 1.5% margin, a 0.3% management fee, and a 0.3% commitment fee. The facility was split between a $1.0 billion Phase I facility and a $1.0 billion Phase II facility. Availability of the Phase II facility was subject to confirmation by the lender on or prior to the date falling five years after satisfaction of the conditions precedent to the MLFA and was made available by China Eximbank during that period. The MLFA is a framework agreement under which the Government of Angola and China Eximbank may conclude individual buyer’s credit loan agreements (ILAs or subsidiary loan agreements) for the purpose of financing up to 90% of the contract price owing to certain contractors in respect of certain contracts. The first tranche of the facility was released in December 2004. The facility was fully drawn down as of December 31, 2017. Sonangol provided a source of collateral under the MLFA, and repayments were made with the proceeds of oil sales from Sonangol to UNIPEC (China international United Petroleum & Chemicals Co. Ltd, Sinopec group), which were deposited in an Angolan Ministry of Finance (MINFIN) account at China Eximbank. The volume of oil to be sold to UNIPEC each month for repayment of the loan varied according to market oil prices. Under the agreement, 70% of works have to be contracted with Chinese companies and the same proportion of construction material, equipment and labour has to be contracted in China. Loan disbursements were made on a project-by-project basis. Tendering, management and payments were jointly managed by the Chinese Ministry of Commerce and the Angolan Ministry of Finance (which coordinated the various Angolan line ministries responsible for supervising the projects). The Angolan Ministry of Finance submitted the projects for tendering; China Eximbank selected Chinese candidate firms for the projects; and a joint commission made the final firm selections. The process was managed by an office in the Angolan Ministry of Finance -- known as Gabinete de Apoio Técnico (GAT) -- that was specifically created to manage the MLFA with China Eximbank. In March 2005, China Eximbank and the Government of Angola signed a $41,006,416.61 subsidiary buyer’s credit loan agreement for the Huambo and Bié Agricultural School Construction Project. The proceeds of the loan were used to partially finance a $45,562,685.12 commercial contract with Sinohydro, which was signed on March 4, 2005. Then, on July 19, 2007, China Eximbank entered into another $500 million MLFA with the Government of Angola (captured via Project ID#34030). The MLFA was meant to finance 'complementary actions' to the 2004 MLFA (captured via Project ID#42029). The 2007 MLFA facility financed a total of 18 contracts, which supported projects originally undertaken through the 2004 MLFA. ILAs approved through the 2007 MLFA carried the following borrowing terms: a 21.5 maturity, a 1.5 year grace period, an interest rate of 3-month LIBOR plus a 1.5% margin, a 0.3% management fee, and a 0.3% commitment fee. Sonangol provided a source of collateral under the MLFA, and repayments were made with the proceeds of oil sales from Sonangol to UNIPEC (China international United Petroleum & Chemicals Co. Ltd, Sinopec group), which were deposited in an Angolan Ministry of Finance (MINFIN) account at China Eximbank. The volume of oil to be sold to UNIPEC each month for repayment of the loan varied according to market oil prices. Under the July 2007 MLFA, China Eximbank and the Government of Angola signed a $26.55 million subsidiary buyer’s credit loan agreement to support “complementary actions” related to the Huambo and Bié Agricultural School Construction Project. Project ID#34773 captures the first, $41 million China Eximbank loan that supported this project. Project ID#34795 captures the second, $26.55 million China Eximbank loan for agricultural schools in Huambo and Bié. The purpose of the project, which employed 98 Angolan workers and 41 Chinese workers, was to construct two agriculture schools: one in Ndango, Caála within Huambo Province and one in Andulo within Bié Province. The Huambo Medium Agrarian Institute has three two-story buildings each, which serve as dormitories, classrooms, and an administrative area. There are 15 residences for teachers, a cafeteria with the capacity for 150 people, a health centre, gymnasium, laboratories, a laundry, and kitchen, apart from areas of leisure and soccer fields. Outside the facility there are 30 hectares of land for practical lessons for students. The facilities are designed to accommodate 262 students. The facility has 22 classrooms. Overall, the school occupies over 10,000 square meters of land. In the Medium Agrarian Institute (Instituto Medio Agrario) of Bié, there are two classrooms for 50 students, an amphitheater for 30 students, a small classroom for language teaching, and a computer and laboratory room. There are also three offices, a library and a warehouse. In the classrooms there are chairs, benches, chairs and tables. Sinohydro was the contractor responsible for implementation. The project was ultimately completed, according to Angola’s Ministry of Finance. A school inauguration ceremony took place on February 7, 2008. A handover ceremony for the Andulo Agricultural Institute was held on February 5, 2008.

Additional details

1. The Portuguese project title is Construção de 2 Institutos Médios Agrários nas Províncias do Bié (Andulo) e Huambo (Caála). The institute in Andulo is referred to as 安杜鲁农学院 or 比埃农学院 in Chinese, and the institute in Huambo is referred to as 万博农学院 in Chinese. 2. The 2003 framework agreement (中华人民共和国商务部与安哥拉共和国财政部关于两国经贸合作特殊安排的框架协议) specified that Sinosure would be signing relevant agreements with the Government of Angola. Therefore, AidData has coded Sinosure as an accountable agency and as providing insurance for the loan. 3. AidData considers this loan to be collateralized in a de facto sense. The cash deposited by the Angolan Ministry of Finance into a bank account controlled by China Eximbank is, for all intents and purposes, a source of collateral. This is true even if the lender does not have a formal security interest in the account. 4. AidData relies on the maturity, grace period, and interest rate that are recorded in the World Bank's Debt Reporting System (a 3.0899% interest rate, a 21.5 year maturity, and a 1.5 year grace period). See https://www.dropbox.com/s/ab8qt4n6jijcbhd/IDS_Average%20interest%20on%20new%20external%20debt%20commitments.xlsx?dl=0 and https://www.dropbox.com/s/949n5rctiue6d7c/IDS_Average_grace_period_and_maturity_on_new_external_debt_commitments.xlsx?dl=0 and https://www.dropbox.com/s/2sw4f7gluxa52fk/DRS%20Official%20Commitments%20from%20China%20Through%202021.xlsx?dl=0 and https://www.dropbox.com/s/0vpohwt96l40o19/World%20Bank%20DRS%20Extract%20Sep%202021%20--%20Chinese%20Loan%20Commitments%20from%202013%20to%202019.xlsx?dl=0 5. According to another World Bank source (https://documents1.worldbank.org/curated/pt/122781468002433388/pdf/397100v20ER0P01disclosed0Feb0602008.pdf), all borrowings under the MLFA carried a management fee (comissão de gestão) of 0.3%; a commitment fee (comissão de imobilização) of 0.3%, and an installation fee (comissão de instalação) of 1%.

Number of official sources

8

Number of total sources

14

Download the dataset

Details

Cofinanced

No

Direct receiving agencies [Type]

Government of Angola [Government Agency]

Implementing agencies [Type]

SinoHydro [State-owned Company]

Government of Angola [Government Agency]

Insurance provider [Type]

China Export & Credit Insurance Corporation (Sinosure) [State-owned Company]

Collateral provider [Type]

Sociedade Nacional de Combustiveis de Angola (Sonangol) [State-owned Company]

Collateral

Sonangol provided a source of collateral under the MLFA, and repayments were made with the proceeds of oil sales from Sonangol to UNIPEC (China international United Petroleum & Chemicals Co. Ltd, Sinopec group), which were deposited in an Angolan Ministry of Finance (MINFIN) account at China Eximbank. The volume of oil to be sold to UNIPEC each month for repayment of the loan varied according to market oil prices.

Loan Details

Maturity

22 years

Interest rate

3.0899%

Grace period

2 years

Grant element (OECD Grant-Equiv)

37.5616%

Bilateral loan

Export buyer's credit

Investment project loan

Pre-export financing or Commodity prepayment financing