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TotalEnergies CEO says IMF debt rules hobbling African green energy projects

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Patrick Pouyanne says investment in Africa is being hindered by insufficient loan guarantees REUTERS/Amr Alfiky/File Photo

By America Hernandez

PARIS – Renewable energy investments in Africa are being hobbled by insufficient government loan guarantees, as the International Monetary Fund keeps a tight leash on country indebtedness, TotalEnergies CEO Patrick Pouyanne said.

Electricity projects in Africa suffer from “a problem of solvency… you have a risk not to be paid”, Pouyanne said. “So when a renewable developer wants to develop, and it’s obvious you have huge potential, he will go and see the government and ask for guarantees.”

Organizations

“But the African governments, they will tell you, are not able to give these guarantees because the IMF is coming and telling them, ‘Don’t go and give these guarantees, you are already over-indebted’.”

Pouyanne said the result was that in Africa his company was largely limited to business-to-business mining projects, because it is an industry where they know they will receive payment.

TotalEnergies has oil and gas operations in 40 African countries, plus two solar parks in Egypt, with plans to build a hydroelectric power plant in Mozambique and a solar power and battery storage project in South Africa.

Its global renewable energy projects totalled 22 gigawatts (GW) of installed capacity by the end of 2023.

The comments were made at a government-industry dialogue hosted by the International Energy Agency, focusing on Africa and renewable energy.

“I am disappointed not to see … a real international financial body to counter-guarantee all these African states — and not to ask them more than what we are asking,” Pouyanne said.

He said on TotalEnergies’ 1 GW solar plant in Iraq, the project’s international financiers were asking the Iraqi government for more loan guarantees than TotalEnergies, leading the French company to fully self-insure the project to avoid burdening the government with more debt.

(This story has been officially corrected to change the number of African countries with TotalEnergies operations to 40 from 30 and adds updated information on Mozambique hydroelectric project in paragraph 5)

(Editing by Jan Harvey)

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