Centum risks losing its Sh2.1 billion debt
investment in the Lamu coal power project which has been rocked by
delayed funding and regulatory challenges.
The Nairobi
Securities Exchange-listed firm holds a 51 percent stake in Amu Power,
the investment vehicle that was set up to develop the 1,050 megawatts
coal-fired power plant.
“The company has recorded a
one-off impairment provision of Sh2.3 billion of which Sh2.1 billion is
against the debt instrument investment in Amu Power Company Limited,”
Centum said yesterday when releasing its results for the half year ended
September.
The company says that while it has made
substantial progress in implementing the project, key hurdles remain
including delayed funding and opposition from the National Environment
Tribunal.
Amu, for instance, is yet to secure a partial risk guarantee that lenders require to release funds.
The African Development Bank (AfDB), which was to provide the
partial risk guarantee, recently withdrew its support for the coal
plant.
Such guarantees protect investors against
various political risks including seizure of an asset by the government,
defaults or change in laws. Centum’s half year profit to September more
than quadrupled to Sh6.79 billion lifted by strong investment income
mainly as result of net gains on disposal of three investments.
The
performance, a contrast from Sh2.07 billion in a similar period last
year, is higher than the bottom-line that the group has been returning
year-on-year since 2016. This raises prospects of beating the Sh7.94
billion profit of 2015 which is the highest in the group’s history.
Group
CEO James Mworia said private equity business booked net gains of Sh12
billion from the disposal of Almasi Beverages Limited, Nairobi Bottlers
Limited and King Beverages Limited, all which were concluded within the
reporting period.
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