IL&FS may merge wind energy biz with PE-backed Orient Green Power

By Rounak Kumar Gunjan

  • 20 Jan 2017
Credit: Thinkstock

Chennai-based Orient Green Power Company Ltd (OGPL) is in advanced talks to merge its wind energy assets with IL&FS Wind Energy Ltd, it said on Thursday. The proposed move would create the top public-listed renewable energy firm in India with 1.2 giga watt (GW) of operating wind power capacity.

OGPL is in the process of demerging its wind and biomass entities into two separate companies—OGPL (Wind) and Bio-bijlee Green Power Ltd (Biomass). Subsequent to the demerger, the firm that counts private equity investors Olympus Capital and Bessemer Venture Partners as investors will have an operating wind capacity of 425 mega watt (MW) with an additional 43 MW under construction.

IL&FS Wind has an operating capacity of 775 MW and is also developing an additional 228 MW. In a note dated September 2016, rating agency ICRA assigned a stable outlook for a Rs 200 crore debenture issue by the firm. The firm had moderate gearing with debt on its standing at Rs 471 crore as on 31 March, entirely comprising optionally fully convertible debentures from its parent.

“The combined entity will benefit from an enhanced financial position, geographic diversity of wind projects and a variety of power purchase agreements. It will also enjoy a strong pipeline of new projects,” said T Shivaraman, vice chairman, OGPL.

“This transaction will be value accretive for both parties—the combined entity will emerge as a market leading renewable energy company with a presence across all significant wind markets in the country,” said Vibhav Kapoor, group chief investment officer, Infrastructure Leasing and Financial Services (IL&FS).

IL&FS Wind Energy is a part of IL&FS Energy Development Co Ltd, which in turn is part of IL&FS Group. The group has a presence in other business domains of infrastructure besides private equity (IL&FS Investment Managers Ltd).

In May 2016, Mint had reported citing unnamed people that IL&FS is looking to float its wind power business through an infrastructure investment trust to raise Rs 2,000 crore.

Meanwhile, OGPL said earlier in the day that its board has approved entering exclusive discussions with IL&FS Wind Energy to evaluate the potential merger. Both companies have formed a non–binding agreement with an exclusivity period of 90 days.

Arpwood Capital is the sole transaction advisor.

OGPL scrip shot up 11.53% to close at Rs 11.22 a share on BSE, in a flat Mumbai market on Thursday. The company disclosed the proposed merger after market hours.

However, The Economic Times had reported the proposed move earlier in the day, citing unnamed persons.

Going green

India’s renewable energy sector – especially wind and solar power – has attracted a clutch of financial and strategic investors, lured by opportunities after the government set ambitious capacity addition targets to cater to the rising demand for electricity.

As first reported by VCCircle, ReNew Power Ventures Pvt. Ltd, floated by former investment banker and Suzlon COO Sumant Sinha, is acquiring two wind power projects in Andhra Pradesh and Gujarat.

In June, Tata Power Co. Ltd agreed to buy the renewable energy business of Welspun Group for Rs 9,249 crore ($1.4 billion) including debt, making it the top player in the green energy sector in the country. The deal is the largest in India's renewable energy sector thus far.

Morgan Stanley Infrastructure Partners-backed Continuum Wind Energy Pte. Ltd sold a small wind power project in India to a Mumbai-based developer Dosti Group.

In 2015, Italian renewable energy firm Enel Green Power SpA acquired a majority stake in BLP Energy, the utility scale wind and solar subsidiary of Bharat Light & Power Pvt. Ltd, a clean energy company floated by a former CEO of GE India, for €30 million ($33.5 million or Rs 221 crore). With this transaction Enel entered the Indian renewables market, marking the group’s first move into the Asia-Pacific region.

Pune-based Simran Wind Project Pvt. Ltd, a unit of Techno Electric and Engineering Company Ltd, sold 44.45 MW wind power assets in Tamil Nadu for Rs 215 crore (about $34 million then) to an unnamed buyer.

In another development, PE firm Actis created an India-focused wind energy platform under Octro and committed $230 million investment.

Through these deals, the acquirers seek to benefit from the Indian government's ambitious plan of achieving 100 GW of solar and 60 GW of wind power generation capacity by 2022, up from around 7.6 GW of solar power and about 26.8 GW of wind power at present.

Last year, the government also sought to boost hybrid solar and wind power projects in the country with incentives and a financing system to increase renewable energy sources while using existing transmission infrastructure and land better.

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