Nordsee One offshore wind farm reaches Financial Close
Approximately 70% of the project’s required costs will be provided from an €840 million non-recourse secured construction and term loan and related loan facilities from ten international commercial lenders. Reflecting the strength of Nordsee One, the financing was oversubscribed. The lending group includes ABN AMRO, Bank of Montreal, Commerzbank, Export Development Canada, Helaba, KfW IPEX, National Bank of Canada, Natixis, Rabobank and The Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi.
“We are very pleased to announce this important milestone,” noted John Brace, CEO of Northland. “The financing for Nordsee One was completed quickly for a project of this size, thanks to the skill and diligence of the project’s financiers and advisors, and the overall quality of the project. Today’s announcement underscores Northland’s ability to deliver sustained growth and strong results, and our commitment to becoming a leader in the rapidly growing offshore wind industry.”
Nordsee One is entitled to a feed-in tariff subsidy under the German Renewable Energy Act. A substantial portion of the project returns are earned during the feed-in-tariff period, while the remainder of the planned returns are expected from the robust and mature German wholesale electricity market.
Senvion SE, a German based company and one of the largest turbine suppliers to the offshore wind industry, will supply, install, and maintain the 54 wind turbine generators for the project, each with a 6.15 MW capacity. The balance of plant will be engineered and constructed by four experienced offshore wind contractors.
“Today we have good news for Germanys offshore plans and for the energy transition in general,” said Hans B?nting, CEO of RWE Innogy. “By signing the contract today, we have created the financial foundation for realising the Nordsee One wind farm jointly with Northland Power. This is consistent with our strategy of developing partnerships to spread the high costs of realising large offshore projects across several shoulders. This facilitates the best possible utilisation of both partners’ expertise and experience.”
“I would like to thank our partner RWE for their expertise, support and cooperation throughout the final stages of development and financing,” added Sean Durfy, President and Chief Development Officer of Northland. “I would also like to acknowledge the efforts of the team, who demonstrated their proficiency in development and project finance by completing this process in only six months. The integration of the Northland, RWE and Nordsee One teams was seamless, and we will continue to work closely together throughout construction, which will be executed by a team of highly experienced offshore wind professionals.”
The project is located 40 kilometers north of Juist Island in German territorial waters with shallow water and high wind speeds – ideal conditions for an offshore wind farm. Once operational, Nordsee One is expected to generate over 1,200 gigawatt hours of electricity per year, enough to meet the needs of approximately 400,000 German households. Offshore wind development is a key feature of Germany’s ‘Energiewende’ program, the official policy supporting renewable power generation with a stated goal for offshore wind capacity of 6.5 GW of installed capacity by 2020 and 15 GW by 2030.
“This important milestone is the achievement of a long development process and allows the construction work to start. It is the result of the work of a dedicated project team which we are very proud to lead and it represents a cornerstone of Germany’s energy transition process. We as Nordsee One are proud to contribute to this challenging endeavour,” said Pierre Lestienne and Tim Kittelhake, the joint managing directors of the project.
The Project was advised by Green Giraffe (financial), Linklaters (legal), Chatham (hedging). The banks were advised by Clifford Chance (legal), Sgurr (technical), Benatar (insurance), Corality (model audit) and EY (tax).
Northland and RWE also jointly own two early-stage development projects, Nordsee Two and Nordsee Three, each with the same ownership levels as Nordsee One (85% and 15% respectively). These projects, totaling approximately 670 MW, are anticipated to be developed over the next decade as offshore wind tariffs are extended and the grid infrastructure is made available.
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