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Business News/ Companies / Blackstone-backed Hindustan Powerprojects plans solar IPO
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Blackstone-backed Hindustan Powerprojects plans solar IPO

The company plans to double investment in photovoltaic projects to $2 billion by 2016

New York-based Blackstone invested $300 million in Moser Baer Projects in August 2010. Photo: BloombergPremium
New York-based Blackstone invested $300 million in Moser Baer Projects in August 2010. Photo: Bloomberg

New Delhi:Hindustan Powerprojects Pvt. Ltd, an Indian generator backed by Blackstone Group Lp, plans to sell shares in its solar unit as it prepares to double investment in photovoltaic projects to $2 billion by 2016.

“It’s a sensible business to take out to market," said Ratul Puri, chairman of the New Delhi-based developer of coal, solar and hydropower plants, formerly known as Moser Baer Projects Pvt. Ltd.The unit has a pipeline of projects that will require $1 billion of investment within the next two years, he said, although the company has “no immediate need for cash."

Goldman Sachs Group Inc., UBS AG and Credit Suisse Group AG have been appointed managers to the initial public offering (IPO), according to two people familiar with the matter, who asked not to be named because the information isn’t public. Puri declined to comment on the bankers.

Rising coal prices have pushed electricity rates in India up by 40% on average since 2010, making solar cheaper for commercial consumers in Delhi and Mumbai compared with electricity from the grid, according to Bloomberg New Energy Finance. India, which had virtually no solar power three years ago, plans to attract $11.7 billion of investment by 2017 into the industry to reduce costly fuel imports.

It may still be “too early" for solar developers to go to market, said Madhavan Nampoothiri, founder of Chennai-based RESolve Energy Consultants, without specifically referring to Hindustan Powerprojects. “We need more good quality projects on the ground to give confidence about the performance of plants and the expected long-term returns."

New York-based Blackstone invested $300 million in New Delhi-based Moser Baer Projects in August 2010. The world’s biggest buyout firm holds about 36% in the company, Puri said. The solar unit, which operates farms in India, the UK, Italy and Germany, will be the first to list of the holding company’s four units that include hydropower, coal power and coal mining, he said in an interview in New Delhi.

“We already have the capacity to allow a listing," with 350 MW of photovoltaic projects running, Puri said. “We also have to provide exit to our investors." He declined to say how much the company expects to raise from the share sale.

Solar power is perfect fit for India, Puri said.

Generation from panels peaks when electricity demand surges during the subcontinent’s hot summer months and in the middle of the day as farmers switch on irrigation pumps. Farm pumps account for one-fifth of the power drawn on the nation’s grid, according to Tarun Kapoor, joint-secretary at the ministry of new and renewable energy.

Another advantage is that photovoltaic projects can be built in as short a time as six weeks, Puri said, compared with over seven years for Hindustan Powerprojects’ 2,520 MW coal-powered project in Anuppur in Madhya Pradesh.

Solar will also become increasingly compelling for India as an energy source because it will reduce the cost of transmission and distribution by generating power close to where it can be consumed, he said.

The cost of building capacity into the grid to handle peak-time generation from conventional sources raises the actual price of power by 12 times, Puri said.

“Solar helps you bypass that," he said. “That’s why distributed power is very valuable."

India could add a further 2 GW of capacity by 2016 to the 2.6 GW installed currently, according to RESolve Energy’s Nampoothiri. Obstacles include the possibility of anti- dumping duties on equipment imports and project failures due to overly aggressive bidding by developers, he said.

India’s commerce ministry may issue recommendations by 21 May in a two-year-old probe prompted by complaints from domestic solar manufacturers that competitors from the US, China, Malaysia, Europe and Japan sold cells below cost, New Delhi- based consultant Bridge to India Energy Pvt. Ltd said in a note to clients late yesterday, without saying where it got the information. Bloomberg

George Smith Alexander contributed to this story.

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Published: 13 May 2014, 05:21 PM IST
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