ACWA Power-led Consortium Reaches Financial Close for $1.302 Billion Red Sea Project

The consortium had been selected to design, build, operate and transfer the Red Sea Project’s utilities infrastructure and relies entirely on renewable energy for power generation, water production. (Asharq Al-Awsat)
The consortium had been selected to design, build, operate and transfer the Red Sea Project’s utilities infrastructure and relies entirely on renewable energy for power generation, water production. (Asharq Al-Awsat)
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ACWA Power-led Consortium Reaches Financial Close for $1.302 Billion Red Sea Project

The consortium had been selected to design, build, operate and transfer the Red Sea Project’s utilities infrastructure and relies entirely on renewable energy for power generation, water production. (Asharq Al-Awsat)
The consortium had been selected to design, build, operate and transfer the Red Sea Project’s utilities infrastructure and relies entirely on renewable energy for power generation, water production. (Asharq Al-Awsat)

A consortium led by ACWA Power has reached financial close for the $1.302 billion Red Sea multi-utilities project in Saudi Arabia.

ACWA Power, in consortium with China’s SPIC Huanghe Hydropower Development Company and Saudi Tabreed Cooling Company, reached financial close for the senior debt facilities for the project.

The consortium had been selected as preferred bidder for the planned PPP project to design, build, operate and transfer The Red Sea Project’s utilities infrastructure and relies entirely on renewable energy for power generation, water production, wastewater treatment and district cooling.

TRSDC - the developer behind the world’s most ambitious regenerative tourism project, is the procurer of the project where all the utilities are being procured under a single offtake arrangement, unique for a contract of this kind.

The PPP contract will include the provision of power and water production, sewage treatment and solid waste treatment.

The project will have a 340MW solar photovoltaic plant with an associated storage system utilizing a battery energy storage system plant for captive use, which at a design capacity of around 1.200 GWh will upon deployment be one of the world’s largest utility-scale systems of its kind.

The scope of the project also includes construction of three seawater reverse osmosis plants totaling a capacity of 32,500 cubic meters per day at the project, designed to provide clean drinking water.

“The Red Sea Development Project, in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, spanning an area the size of Belgium, is a remarkable project in terms of vision, ambition, size and scope,” said Paddy Padmanathan, Chief Executive Officer and Vice Chairman, ACWA Power.

He added that “the commitments from such a diverse group of lenders is a testament to the strength of the vision and structure of this transaction and above all underpins the faith and belief that financial markets have in ACWA Power’s track record.”

The senior debt project is financed through a combination of US dollar denominated and Saudi Riyal denominated soft mini-perm and long-term financing provided by a consortium of Saudi Arabian and international banks, including the Al Rajhi Bank, APICORP, Bank Saudi Fransi, Riyad Bank, Saudi British Bank, Saudi National Bank and Standard Chartered.

The Red Sea Development Company is owned by sovereign wealth vehicle Public Investment Fund (PIF), and the PIF will provide the guarantee for the 25-year offtake agreement.



Gold Poised for Biggest Weekly Fall in over Five Months on Dollar Strength

FILE PHOTO: Gold bullions are displayed at GoldSilver Central's office in Singapore June 19, 2017. REUTERS/Edgar Su/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: Gold bullions are displayed at GoldSilver Central's office in Singapore June 19, 2017. REUTERS/Edgar Su/File Photo
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Gold Poised for Biggest Weekly Fall in over Five Months on Dollar Strength

FILE PHOTO: Gold bullions are displayed at GoldSilver Central's office in Singapore June 19, 2017. REUTERS/Edgar Su/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: Gold bullions are displayed at GoldSilver Central's office in Singapore June 19, 2017. REUTERS/Edgar Su/File Photo

Gold prices dropped on Friday, poised for their steepest weekly decline in over five months, pressured by a stronger dollar and as markets absorbed the implications of Donald Trump's victory and its potential impact on US interest rate expectations.

Spot gold fell 0.6% to $2,690.62 per ounce as of 9:50 a.m. ET (1450 GMT), and was down 1.6% for the week.

US gold futures shed 0.3% to $2,697.90.

The dollar index gained 0.3%, on track for a weekly gain, Reuters reported

"In the last month, the story has been the uncertainty risk of the election and if there was going to be normalisation of transition, but this election appeared to be very decisive on the White House," said Alex Ebkarian, chief operating officer at Allegiance Gold.

"A lot of risk-on assets started benefiting in terms of the potential future implication of policies, so we had money go out of metals into these alternatives."

The Federal Reserve on Thursday cut interest rates by 25 basis points, but indicated a cautious approach to further cuts.

Trump's victory has fuelled questions about whether the Fed may proceed to cut rates at a slower and smaller pace, given the former president's tariff policy.

However, Fed Chair Jerome Powell said the election results would have no "near-term" impact on monetary policy.

The prospect of rate cuts, starting with the half basis point reduction in September, has underpinned gold's record rally this year.

Although bullion is reputed as a hedge against inflation, higher interest rates reduce non-yielding gold's appeal.

"Should markets restore the odds for a pre-Christmas Fed rate cut...that should help keep spot gold above the psychological $2700 level," Exinity Group Chief Market Analyst Han Tan said.

On the physical front, gold demand in India faltered, while Japan and Singapore saw some buying.

Spot silver fell 1.3% to $31.58 per ounce, platinum fell 1.8% to $979.15, palladium shed 2.3% to $1,001.25. All three metals were heading for weekly declines.