TET 407 - Energy Financing & Trading
TET 407 - Energy Financing & Trading
TET 407 - Energy Financing & Trading
Each of the players will do their own due diligence or examination of the
project before committing money to the project.
The analysis may include a review of:
o The business plan
o Projected cash flows, margins, IRR, NPV;
o Reliability of technology involved;
o Creditworthiness of all parties involved;
o Likelihood of changes in regulatory and policy environment;
o Permits and environmental approval (required for project to begin
construction and operation)
Risk insurance
Even after the analysis, a risk never actually disappears but rather, it is simply
transferred (allocated) to somebody else’s balance sheet.
Once a structure for risk sharing is identified and agreed upon, each of the
key risks involved can be allocated and priced under contractually binding
arrangements.
For projects in developing countries, governments (often backed by bilateral or
multilateral agencies) partially or fully assume the risks that result from their own
actions including policy, regulatory and country risks.
Risks due to events beyond governments nor project sponsors are covered by
insurance or other contracts/solutions from private sources.
Where such insurance is unavailable or premiums are too expensive, then
public assistance is required to mitigate the risk.
In World Bank, the Multilateral Investment Guarantee Association (MIGA) was
formed by the Bank specifically to provide guarantees to development work.
Returns
After assessing the risks, financial organizations are willing to lend or
invest money when they expect to make a profit, e.g. a return on investment
(ROI) or a return on equity (ROE).
The return is generally earned in the form of interest (in the case of loans)
and dividends (in the case of equity investment).
The higher the perceived risk of a programme or project, the higher the
required return in order to attract investors to it.
Basic types of financing
Debt - Debt financing involves taking a loan or issuing a bond to provide capital
and require repayment of both the amount of money borrowed and the interest
charged on that amount.
Equity - Equity investors provide capital in a project in return for a share of the equity
of the project. It entails sharing ownership and/or revenues with the investment
partner(s) through ordinary or preferential shareholding, including that equity
investors maintain the right to get involved in the decision-making process of the
project or company in order to protect their investment.
Grants and guarantees - Grants do not require repayment, they are essentially “gift”
money with specific requirements or terms for use. Governmental and international
organizations offer grants to promote environmental and development policies.
Types of financing models
Government-led model - Most of the financing programmes are managed by a
government body or donor organization, although the actual model can take on
several different forms and include different market players.
o For example, the overall management and allocation of funds may remain under
federal government control, but then involve some form of private sector
participation, as a vendor of goods and services (not as the owner-operator) and a
high degree of participation from the communities.
o The state may offer subsidy to cover the initial investment costs in a joint financing
with the electricity companies and the users. This makes the projects affordable to
the consumer.
Market-based models - Due to the perceived high risk and low return on investment
for RE and EE projects, few success stories using a market-based model are available.
However, international aid agencies have been developing several market-based
business models, especially for rural electrification programmes.
o Consumer finance – The consumer financing (CF) approach implies consumers purchase their system
from a dealer on credit by making a down payment and financing the balance with a loan,
making periodic payments of capital and interest. The customer gets (gradual) ownership of the
system.
o Leasing - In the leasing model, the leasing company procures systems on a wholesale basis, and
then offers them to households through retail lease agreements. In contrast to the CF approach, the
leasing company retains ownership of the system, although it is often gradually transferred to the
customer.
o Fee-for-service or ESCO - A fee-for-service approach, also known as an Energy Service Company
(ESCO) model, offer rural households the best prospect for widespread access to sustainable energy
services. ESCOs intervene in two aspects of the financing structure: 1) in downsizing the high initial
costs of systems by offering a staggered payment and fee for service models; 2), in serving as financial
intermediaries in consumer bank loan procurements and guarantees for securing loans.
List of potential donors and funds
A) International multilateral funding
Funding is available through multilateral development banks such as the World
Bank, the Global Environment Facility (GEF) or the European Commission.
This type of formal funding in general is only accessible for governments and not
for private developers and most often consists of loans at an interest rate or pay-
back periods below commercial averages, and sometimes grants are applied.
The large development banks also offer guarantees to mitigate the risk of the
project and facilitate other forms of financing (such as loans from commercial
sources).
Examples include the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development
(IBRD) and the International Finance Corporation (IFC).
For CDM (Clean Development Mechanism) and low carbon projects, several
“Carbon Funds” have been established, including the Prototype Carbon Fund, the
Community Development Carbon Fund and the Carbon Fund for Europe.
B) Regional development banks
This type of funding is generally only accessible for governments, and, due
to political priorities or historical relations, often specifies preferred target regions
or countries.
D) Government finance
In many developed countries, public funding is still the most important source of
financing for RE and EE.
This funding is usually provided in the form of loans or grants, and is combined
with financing from multilateral and bilateral organizations.
Running a power station is an expensive process and demand for energy never
stops.
The energy market ensures the country’s energy demand are met while also aiming
to keep energy businesses sustainable, through balancing the price of buying raw
materials with the at which energy is sold.
For electricity for example, trading ensures the grid remains balanced and meets
demand where the system operator also makes deals with generators for ancillary
services far in advance or last-minute.
This ensures elements such as frequency, voltage and reserve capacity are kept
stable across the country and that the grid remains safe and efficient.
Energy trading therefore ensures there is always a supply of energy and that the
market for energy operates in a stable way.
Speculating on Energy Prices
In theory, then, trading energy company shares is a way to make a leveraged bet on the
price of energy commodities. As the commodity’s price rises, more revenues should
flow to the bottom line in the form of profits.
However, many factors other than commodity prices can affect the performance of
energy company share prices:
o Production costs: A rise or fall in the cost of wages or equipment, for example, affects
profits.
o Competition: The strength of competitors can affect the profitability of energy
companies.
o Interest rates: Changes in interest rates can affect the cost of debt servicing. This factor
is especially important to utility companies with huge infrastructure financing costs.
o Local Economies: The relative strength of the economy where a company sells its
products can impact its profits.
o Multiple Contraction or Expansion: The market assigns price/earnings multiples to
companies based on perceptions of future prospects. Changes to these multiples can
cause fluctuations in share prices.
Markets
Power is traded on different marketplaces.
In general, the power delivery timeframe and the form of the transaction
characterize how the marketplaces are defined.
Since power cannot be stored in large quantities, power trading is conducted using
either short-term trades or long-term agreements, in which the power has yet to
be produced.
A) OTC
o In Over The Counter (OTC) trading, power is directly traded between two parties
which prices and trading volume are agreed in bilateral negotiations.
o OTC trading is the most common form of power trading, especially in the
conventional power industry.
o It is less common in the renewable energy industry.
B) Power Purchase Agreements
o A power purchase agreement (PPA) often refers to a long-term electricity supply
agreement between two parties usually a power producer and a customer (such as
an electricity consumer or trader).
o A power producer is usually seeking long-term income with a PPA, while the a
power consumer is seeking long-term power provision.
o Renewable power producers are usually too small, in terms of installed power
and trading expertise, to directly trade their produced power on energy markets.
o To enable renewable energy resources to integrate into the market, various
subsidy schemes or Feed-in Premiums (FIP) are used.
o A FIP is different from a FIT. A FIT refers to a subsidy that is paid for feeding-in RE,
this power is traded by the TSO or the DSO and effectively means that the FITs
socialize the risk. A FIP on the other hand refers to a subsidy that is paid when
power is sold on power exchanges either by the asset owners directly or by a
third –party aggregator.
Energy Trading Reporting
Energy trading is subjected to regulations that originally applied to financial markets,
including the market abuse regulations (MAD and MAR), the European Market
Infrastructure Regulation (EMIR), as well as rules specifically designed for the energy
market, such as the Regulation on wholesale Energy Market Integrity and Transparency
(REMIT).
The objective of REMIT is to increase integrity and transparency in the wholesale
energy market and to foster competition for the benefit of final consumers of energy,
whilst EMIR aims to reduce systemic risk by increasing market transparency and to mitigate
counterparty risks.
The purpose of reporting energy derivatives is to efficiently and effectively monitor energy
trading and to detect and prevent suspected market abuse.
Monitoring is essential to ensure that end consumers and other market participants have
confidence in the integrity of electricity and gas markets, that prices set on wholesale
energy markets reflect a fair and competitive interplay between supply and demand
and that no profits can be drawn from market abuse.
Also, insight into activities of parties that may entail a systemic risk is mentioned as a goal of
transaction reporting.
PPP Arrangements/Types of PPP Agreements
Public-private partnerships (PPPs) take a wide range of forms varying in the extent of
involvement of and risk taken by the private party.
The terms of a PPP are typically set out in a contract or agreement to outline the
responsibilities of each party and clearly allocate risk.
Most PPP projects present a contractual term between 20 and 30 years; others have
shorter terms; and a few last longer than 30 years.
The choice of the instrument will depend on national and economic circumstances.
There are also more indirect ways of more accurately pricing carbon, such as through fuel
taxes, the removal of fossil fuel subsidies, and regulations that may incorporate a “social cost
of carbon.”
Greenhouse gas emissions can also be priced through payments for emission reductions.
Private entities or sovereigns can purchase emission reductions to compensate for their own
emissions (so-called offsets) or to support mitigation activities through results-based finance.
Some 40 countries and more than 20 cities, states and provinces already use carbon pricing
mechanisms, with more planning to implement them in the future.
Together the carbon pricing schemes now in place cover about half their emissions, which
translates to about 13% of annual global greenhouse gas emissions.
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