Canadian Solar Closes US$69.0 million Financing

Cleantech Investing

Canadian Solar (NASDAQ:CSIQ) announced that it has achieved financial close on a US$69 million financing for the 67.8 MWp solar project in Mexico. The company said that the non-recourse financing package was provided by Banco Nacional de Comerico Exterior and Banco Sabadell. As quoted in the press release: Bancomext is a Mexican Development Bank and …

Canadian Solar (NASDAQ:CSIQ) announced that it has achieved financial close on a US$69 million financing for the 67.8 MWp solar project in Mexico.

The company said that the non-recourse financing package was provided by Banco Nacional de Comerico Exterior and Banco Sabadell.

As quoted in the press release:

Bancomext is a Mexican Development Bank and Export Credit Agency, whereas Banco Sabadell is a commercial banking group headquartered in Spain.

The financing package consists of a US$53.2 million long-term loan, a US$5.6 million letter of credit facility, and a US$10.2 million Value Added Tax (VAT) short-term loan. Proceeds from the long-term loan will be used to repay a US$45 million construction loan that was previously provided by Natixis.

The Aguascalientes project was awarded a Power Purchase Agreement (PPA) during the 2016 inaugural Mexico energy auction. Electricity generated by the plant will be sold to Comisión Federal de Electricidad, under a 15-year PPA for energy and capacity, and 20-year for Clean Energy Certificates. The solar power plant utilizes over 200,000 high-efficiency CS6U-P Max Power modules supplied by Canadian Solar and is expected to begin its commercial operations before the end of December 2018.

Dr. Shawn Qu, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Canadian Solar, commented, “We are pleased to partner with Bancomext and Banco Sabadell to support Mexico’s goal of reaching 35% renewable energy by 2024. We already have a 436 MWp late-stage pipeline with contracted PPAs in Mexico. These solar projects will enable Canadian Solar to create many local jobs across the Aguascalientes, Hermosillo, and Obregón regions.”

Click here for the full text release.

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