The International Finance
Corporation (IFC), part of the World Bank Group, will loan US$22
million to a private company to build three small hydroelectric
stations in southwest China.
The German Investment and
Development Company and French Promotion and Participation Company
for Economic Cooperation, both IFC partners, would also provide
loans of US$13 million and US$10 million, respectively, for the
project.
The three lenders signed an
agreement on the project, which will cost 600 million yuan (US$75
million), with the Yunnan Zhongda Yanjin Power Generation Company
on Thursday in Hangzhou, capital city of east China's Zhejiang
Province.
Under the agreement, the Yunnan
company will use the loans, to be repaid in 15 years, to construct
the plants with a total capacity of 78,000 kilowatts, on the
Baishui River in Yanjin County, Yunnan Province.
It was the first time the IFC had
provided loans for a clean energy project in China, said Lars
Thunell, IFC executive vice president.
The project, which began in June
2004, would generate 380 million kwh of electricity every year by
the end of 2007, reducing the county's annual emissions of
greenhouse gases by eight million tons, said Thunell.
The IFC would continue to support
China in developing clean and renewable energy, with special
emphasis on assisting private enterprises, he said.
The IFC is the only arm of the World
Bank Group catering to the private sector in developing countries.
It has loaned a total of US$2.45 billion for 101 projects in
China.
(Xinhua News Agency May 12,
2006)
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