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State-owned Beijing Energy explores partnerships to get approval for Australia solar farm deal

A Beijingbased company is open to coordinating with brand-new investors to acquire a number of solar farms in Australia, a company authorities stated, as it wants to satisfy regulatory concerns over the ownership of crucial energy possessions by a. Chinese stateowned company.

Beijing Energy International Holding (BJEI), the. investment arm of the Chinese capital city, revealed in. December that it had actually signed an as much as A$ 813 million ($ 535.44. million) arrangement to buy 5 solar farms throughout Australia from. Lightsource BP, a joint venture set to soon be 100% owned by. British oil and gas giant BP.

That would relate to more than 80% of the overall Chinese. financial investment in Australia last year, based on information from KPMG and. the University of Sydney.

But the company has been waiting for approval from. Australia's Foreign Investment Evaluation Board (FIRB) for months,. the final step for the offer to be finished.

Warwick Smith, a prominent Australian entrepreneur who chairs. BJEI's regional subsidiary, stated the business had satisfied all of FIRB's. regulatory requirements.

My sense of it is that it's a state-owned enterprise. but it has intentions to decrease its equity levels, so that's a. big plus in its favour, he told . It likes to see other. investors included.

He decreased to offer any information of the investors the. business was most likely to choose as partners.

The Chinese company went into Australia in 2014 when it. bought a wind farm in New South Wales state.

With the acquisition of the solar farms from Lightsource BP,. it would be the largest owner of utility-scale solar projects in. Australia, outmatching France's Neoen and Spain's FRV,. according to consultancy Rystad Energy.

Foreign financial investments into Australia in the renewables sector. have actually come under heavy examination as Canberra considers the electricity. sector to involve vital facilities vital to. preserving the country's nationwide security.

BJEI also has plans to purchase an Australian electrical power and gas. retailer CovaU, owned by TPC Consolidated Limited. That. is likewise waiting for a choice from FIRB, with a modified expiration. date of July 31 just a week away.

The Australian federal government has actually currently obstructed some Chinese. investments in the rare earths and lithium sectors over the last. year.

Bilateral ties are warming, as evidenced by Chinese Premier. Li Qiang's see to Australia in June, but analysts say Chinese. investments in the country are not likely to go back to the recent. peak of about $11.5 billion in 2016.

China would need to consider more thoroughly whether the. financial investment is long-lasting sustainable and where it fits in the. tactical context, stated Hans Hendrischke, a teacher at the. University of Sydney.

(source: Reuters)