First, ensuring continued economic growth means finding the right energy mix that is necessary for supporting the country’s economy. What is the right amount of renewable energy? What are the right renewable energy sources? Is the country’s grid ready to handle intermittent sources? How does the country ensure flexible base load power supply when the wind is not blowing and the sun is not shining? What are the right thermal energy sources? How does the country ensure security of fuels supply?
Then, you will want to check what is the right business model. Does the country need to manage everything itself, or should it rather use public-private partnerships (PPP) and power purchasing agreements (PPA) with independent power producers (IPP)? The answers will impact the long-term profitability and sustainability of the plant, the impact on the country’s balance sheet as well as the drag on building-up effective human resources with appropriate know-how.
Finally, who are the most suitable partners to achieve the energy targets? Or, in simpler words, how to get the best technology at the optimum compromise between CAPEX and OPEX costs?
In response to this growing complexity, the industry is trending towards multi-national commercial arrangements, in which the key elements of a power project – the project developer; the technology provider; the engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) contractor, the financer, and the plant operator – may come from different players and/or from different countries.
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