BlackRock Invests in Growing Australian Solar Market
August 11 2017 - 3:58AM
Dow Jones News
By Robb M. Stewart
MELBOURNE, Australia--The steady growth of renewable-power
generation in Australia has scored backing from BlackRock Inc.
(BLK), which has bought a majority stake in two projects, in one of
the country's largest solar financing deals to date.
On Friday, the asset manager said it acquired 90% of the
150-megawatt Daydream and 50-megawatt Hayman solar farms in
Queensland state from developer Edify Energy, which will hold the
remaining 10% equity interest.
The deal comes just over a month after Tesla Inc. (TSLA) Chief
Executive Elon Musk agreed to build the world's largest lithium-ion
battery system in Australia, collecting power generated by a wind
farm in South Australia. South Australia state was hit by a string
of blackouts over the past year, raising concerns as some of the
country's older coal-fired energy plants are shuttered.
BlackRock said the acquisition adds further solar resources and
country diversification to its existing renewable-energy portfolio.
Construction on the Australian projects is set to begin and they
are scheduled to be fully operational in 2018.
The assets were bought through a private fund managed by
BlackRock Real Assets, with long-term debt financing provided by
the government's Australia's Clean Energy Finance Corp.,
Commonwealth Bank of Australia Ltd. and international investment
firm Natixis. BlackRock Real Assets has about $30 billion in
invested and committed real-estate and infrastructure assets and
capital.
Jim Barry, global head of BlackRock Real Assets, said the
company's renewable power investments currently amount to more than
$4.8 billion of equity assets under management. "We continue to
invest in attractive markets in order to provide a flow of
addressable investment opportunities for our clients," he said.
Renewable energy still accounts for a relatively small slice of
power production in Australia, although the country's major
utilities are investing in expanding output.
In May, Origin Energy Ltd. (ORG.AU) sold its Darling Downs solar
farm project in Queensland to energy-infrastructure operator APA
Group in a deal that had it agree to buy all the power generated by
the farm until 2030. In about a year, Origin added more than 650
megawatts of solar to its portfolio as it tracks toward a target of
up to 1,500 megawatts of large-scale renewable generation by
2020.
Sustainable Energy Research Analytics, a consultancy, estimated
there is about 311 megawatts of solar power now in operation in
Australia, 1 gigawatt under construction and a further 6 gigawatts
in advanced stages of design.
Write to Robb M. Stewart at robb.stewart@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
August 11, 2017 03:43 ET (07:43 GMT)
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