Canadian Solar subsidiary Recurrent Energy has closed non-recourse project financing for its 119 MW Horus Solar project in Mexico’s Aguascalientes region, funded by Korea Eximbank and KEB Hana Bank.
The project reached Commercial Operation Date last March and has been operating since. It was awarded a PPA during Mexico’s third renewables auction through which it will sell 75% of electricity generated for 15 years and Clean Energy Certificates for 20 years. The remaining 25% will be sold on the spot market.
“The Horus project is a great example of the high value projects that we aim to develop and finance across the world,” says Ismael Guerrero, CEO of Recurrent Energy. “Thank you to our partners at KEXIM and KEB Hana Bank, together with the project sponsors KEPCO and Sprott, for helping enable this solar project that will bring more emissions-free power to Mexico. We remain committed to the Mexican market that boasts some of the best fundamentals worldwide for solar development.”
Recurrent owns 49% of the project, with Korea Electric Power Corporation owning 15% and Sprott owning 36%.
The post Recurrent Energy Closes Financing for 119 MW Mexico Project appeared first on Solar Industry.
Renewable Energy
People Will Hate Me …..
Obviously, this isn’t a real human being, though there are tens of millions with this perspective, so let’s treat him as if he were an actual guy.
No one’s going to hate you, because everyone with a brain supports border control and law enforcement.
You are, however, running the risk of being regarded as a moron. There are hundreds of points of domestic and international law, reason, and humanity that are being addressed every day along these lines.
Why don’t you go on keepin’ those doggies moving, and let the rest of us do our best to figure out how to treat immigrants legally and humanely?
Renewable Energy
Democratic Socialism and Wealth
The guy who sent me this writes Could not be any clearer than that.
Renewable Energy
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We’ve all heard the adage, “If guns are outlawed, only outlaws will have guns.”
It has a nice ring to it, but it really doesn’t hold water in the real world, where counties with strict gun laws, e.g., Japan, England, and Australia have very low rates of violent crime.
Note: these countries don’t have an NRA, a fabulously wealthy lobbying organization that controls their lawmaking apparatus.
Moreover, outside the United States, it’s very hard to find a place where a potentially mentally unstable person can go into a store and walk out with a weapon of war, capable of killing 50+ people each minute.
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