Ex-Im Bank Financing For Sub-Saharan Africa Exceeds $1 Billion For First Time
May 26, 2011
(Export-Import Bank)
WASHINGTON, D.C. - The board of directors of the
Export-Import Bank of the United States (Ex-Im Bank) voted today to
approve an $805.6 million direct loan to South Africa's state-owned
electric power utility, Eskom, Limited. That action, plus today's
approval for over $59 million to enable Rwanda's RwandAir Express to buy
Boeing aircraft, brings Ex-Im Bank's current fiscal year financing in
sub-Saharan Africa to nearly $1.5 billion, nearly double the previous
one year record of $812 million set during the fiscal year ending last
September 30th.
Also contributing to this year's record support for sub-Saharan
Africa buyers of U.S. goods and services was Ex-Im financing for
locomotive and steel coil sales to South Africa, crop dusters to Kenya,
poultry equipment to Uganda, auto parts to Nigeria, and aircraft to
Angola.
Ex-Im Bank financing of U.S.export sales to sub-Saharan Africa
represents our commitment to the region," said Fred P. Hochberg,
chairman and president of the Bank. "The world is rebuilding its
critical infrastructure, and these types of opportunities are available
to U.S. companies in developing areas of the world. We are ready to
finance American exporters to win those sales and keep Americans
working."
"Ex-Im understands the opportunities that exist in Africa and is
enlarging its footprint there," said Ebrahim Rasool, South Africa's
ambassador to the United States. "Moreover, entities like Eskom
understand that they need to put forward proposals which are defensible
both financially and environmentally, and that is where this transaction
was born. We thank Ex-Im for approving the Eskom financing, as well as
the Bank's vision and commitment to South Africa."
The Eskom power plant financing will support Eskom's purchase of
engineering and construction management services from Black & Veatch
International of Overland Park, Kansas, and will be used to construct
the Kusile facility located in the Emalahleni area of the Mpumulanga
Province. Hundreds of highly-skilled American senior engineers and
support personnel in Ann Arbor, Mich., Raleigh, N.C. and Kansas City,
Mo. will be employed by Black & Veatch each year during a five year
period.
South Africa is one of nine countries identified by Ex-Im Bank as
offering the greatest export sales opportunities to U.S. companies. In
winning this contract with the Bank's support, Black & Veatch
overcame competition from several major European engineering companies.
The Kusile plant will consist of six 800 MW units, for a total capacity
of 4,800 MW. It is the second of two plants being constructed by Eskom
in order to meet the country's increasing demand for electric power.
The Kusile plant is designed with advanced technology and equipment,
including highly efficient supercritical boilers. Eskom undertook a
comprehensive environmental assessment for the project, and a number of
environmental safeguards, including scrubbers to control sulfur dioxide
and filtering equipment to minimize particulate emissions were included
in the plant's design. Notably, Kusile will be the first coal-fired
power plant in South Africa to include sulfur dioxide scrubbers. To help
conserve water, the plant will use an air cooling system. The plant
also is designed to be carbon capture and sequestration ready, which
means it is configured in a way that will facilitate subsequent
installation of equipment to capture and transport carbon emissions to a
permanent storage location.
Ex-Im Bank financing supports hundreds of U.S. jobs, and also brings
assurances of compliance with its environmental and social guidelines,
including those for high intensity carbon projects. During its due
diligence process, Ex-Im Bank met on several occasions with officials of
environmental non-governmental organizations and project stakeholders
to address their concerns relating to the potential environmental and
social impacts of the Kusile project. Ex-Im Bank took into account all
of the information and comments it received from these meetings on the
project's potential environmental and social impacts.
The application to finance the Kusile project underwent a review that
focused on aspects related to its carbon dioxide production, and South
Africa's long-range goals to reduce its carbon dioxide production.
Eskom, as a state-owned energy enterprise, has announced its goal to
significantly reduce its long-term dependence on coal by 2025.
Included in the Bank's Carbon Policy is enhanced due diligence and improved transparency in the tracking and reporting of CO2 emissions from projects that the Bank supports. No other export credit agency tracks or discloses this information to the public. The board took its vote after considering the results of a complete financial, technical and environmental review of the project.
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