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PIDG company fund backs 40MW Kesses solar project in Kenya

EAIF is now established as a lender of choice for renewable energy companies investing in Africa. (Image source: Adobe Stock)

The Emerging Africa Infrastructure Fund (EAIF), which is part of the Private Infrastructure Development Group (PIDG), confirmed its leading position as a provider of debt funding to Africa’s alternative energy generation sector

EAIF has provided a US$35mn loan over a 15-year term to the 40MW Kesses solar generation facility to be built near Eldoret in the Rift Valley region of Kenya. The project will cost a total of US$87mn. The first part of the loan was disbursed to Alten Kenya Solarfarms BV, the Kenyan business of the Alten Group, in late December 2021.

Alten Energías Renovables Group is an independent power producer (IPP) with international know-how in developing, financing and operating photovoltaic solar power plants in Sub-Saharan Africa, Central America and Europe. Alten will sell all its output to Kenya Power and Lighting Company (KPLC), the national energy utility, on a 20-year take-or-pay Power Purchase Agreement. Standard Bank was the mandated lead arranger of the project finance to Alten and is supplying US$41mn in debt comprising a term loan, VAT and Debt Service Reserve facility. 

“With the Kesses Project, Standard Bank has been able to provide continued support to the use of clean energy across the African continent allowing for a more sustainable future. This is the second project Standard Bank has funded with the Alten Group and we were pleased to be able to bring in and partner with EAIF for the funding,” said Sherrill Byrne, executive energy and infrastructure finance at Standard Bank.

Building the Kesses plant will improve access to energy for thousands of people supporting SDG 7 and create up to 400 construction jobs, with 15 permanent jobs during operations.

Eldoret has the largest population concentration in the Rift Valley area region with centre for local government, higher education, business and financial services, textile manufacturing, agribusiness and sports tourism. Meeting the growing demand for energy is essential to sustaining economic progress and accelerating economic recovery from the pandemic.

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