Danish Pension Fund To Invest in Renewable Energy Projects in Developing Nations
Sally Bakewell and Mathew Carr, Bloomberg
January 13, 2014 | 0 Comments
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LONDON -- PensionDanmark A/S and other Danish pension investors backed a state fund to finance emission-reduction projects in developing countries as the Scandinavian nation seeks to export its climate know-how abroad.
The Danish Climate Investment Fund received 1.2 billion kroner ($220 million) in commitments from private investors and the government, according to PensionDanmark, which contributed 200 million kroner. The fund will invest on commercial terms in projects that tackle climate change in emerging economies from Africa to Asia, PensionDanmark said in an e-mailed statement.
The initiative follows a United Nations pledge in 2009 to raise capital in richer countries for environmental projects in developing nations. Delegates at UN talks that year agreed to ramp up climate aid to an annual $100 billion by 2020, including private-sector cash. Danish companies have long invested in clean-power projects at home, where the share of wind power in the energy mix is set to almost double by the end of the decade.
“The Climate Investment Fund is a brand new type of public-private partnership in which government funding and private pension investments are allied in making the most of the expertise of Danish companies in the climate and energy sector,” PensionDanmark Chief Executive Officer Torben Moger Pedersen said in today’s statement.
Fund Yield
The fund must invest in emission-reduction projects with a Danish financial interest such as a co-investor or technology supplier, according to PensionDanmark, which has 642,000 members. It will yield a return of about 12 percent a year and may spur total investments of as much as 9 billion kroner, based on experience from similar funding arrangements, it said.
PensionDanmark expects the four-year fund to raise a further 200 million kroner in a second round. The fund, which will also consider investment in Latin America and Europe, will finance part of the projects, with additional cash required from other public and non-state investors such as local banks.
Pension administrator PKA A/S contributed 200 million kroner, retirement fund Paedagogernes Pensionskasse supplied 125 million kroner and private-equity investor Dansk Vaekstkapital 150 million kroner, the statement shows. The Danish state and its Investment Fund for Developing Countries, which co-invests with Danish companies, together provided 525 million kroner.
The UN’s Green Climate Fund, which opened in December, will be a route to channel finance to emerging economies. Developing nations from India to China have said the GCF should compensate them for climate-related damage.
Copyright 2014 Bloomberg.
Lead image: Wind Farm in Denmark via Shutterstock
Sally Bakewell and Mathew Carr, Bloomberg
January 13, 2014 | 0 Comments
Share
29
29
24
LONDON -- PensionDanmark A/S and other Danish pension investors backed a state fund to finance emission-reduction projects in developing countries as the Scandinavian nation seeks to export its climate know-how abroad.
The Danish Climate Investment Fund received 1.2 billion kroner ($220 million) in commitments from private investors and the government, according to PensionDanmark, which contributed 200 million kroner. The fund will invest on commercial terms in projects that tackle climate change in emerging economies from Africa to Asia, PensionDanmark said in an e-mailed statement.
The initiative follows a United Nations pledge in 2009 to raise capital in richer countries for environmental projects in developing nations. Delegates at UN talks that year agreed to ramp up climate aid to an annual $100 billion by 2020, including private-sector cash. Danish companies have long invested in clean-power projects at home, where the share of wind power in the energy mix is set to almost double by the end of the decade.
“The Climate Investment Fund is a brand new type of public-private partnership in which government funding and private pension investments are allied in making the most of the expertise of Danish companies in the climate and energy sector,” PensionDanmark Chief Executive Officer Torben Moger Pedersen said in today’s statement.
Fund Yield
The fund must invest in emission-reduction projects with a Danish financial interest such as a co-investor or technology supplier, according to PensionDanmark, which has 642,000 members. It will yield a return of about 12 percent a year and may spur total investments of as much as 9 billion kroner, based on experience from similar funding arrangements, it said.
PensionDanmark expects the four-year fund to raise a further 200 million kroner in a second round. The fund, which will also consider investment in Latin America and Europe, will finance part of the projects, with additional cash required from other public and non-state investors such as local banks.
Pension administrator PKA A/S contributed 200 million kroner, retirement fund Paedagogernes Pensionskasse supplied 125 million kroner and private-equity investor Dansk Vaekstkapital 150 million kroner, the statement shows. The Danish state and its Investment Fund for Developing Countries, which co-invests with Danish companies, together provided 525 million kroner.
The UN’s Green Climate Fund, which opened in December, will be a route to channel finance to emerging economies. Developing nations from India to China have said the GCF should compensate them for climate-related damage.
Copyright 2014 Bloomberg.
Lead image: Wind Farm in Denmark via Shutterstock
Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone.
--
Monty Bannerman
ArcStar Energy
646.402.5076
www.arcstarenergy.com
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