Renewables

IFC approves loan for Serbia’s largest biomass CHP project to decarbonize paper industry

IFC loan Serbia largest biomass CHP decarbonize paper industry

Photo: Sammutawe / https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/legalcode.en

Published

February 26, 2024

Country

Comments

comments icon

0

Share

Published:

February 26, 2024

Country:

Comments:

comments icon

0

Share

IFC facilitated a loan package of EUR 106 million for Serbian tissue paper producer Drenik ND. The company will use a share of the proceeds to build the country’s first large-scale captive cogeneration plant, which will use biomass.

The International Finance Corp. – IFC approved a EUR 60 million type A loan and facilitated a syndicated package of EUR 46 million as the implementing entity for Drenik ND. The company will develop a captive biomass-fired combined heat and power (CHP) plant in Serbia, refinance debt and strengthen its working capital, according to the documentation.

Drenik is the largest tissue paper producer in the country. It operates a factory on the outskirts of Belgrade, in an industrial zone in Krnjača, where it plans to install the cogeneration system, and another facility in neighboring Hungary.

The CHP project consists of 8 MW in electricity generation capacity and 16 tons of steam per hour

In addition, IFC will provide advisory support to improve the company’s corporate governance and elevate environmental and social management systems, the announcement adds. The CHP plant for own use, set to become the largest of its kind in Serbia, would have 8 MW in electricity generation capacity alongside 16 tons of steam per hour. The idea is to replace grid electricity usage and reduce natural gas consumption.

The cogeneration system is envisaged to require 12.45 tons of wood chips per hour or 90,000 tons per year, IFC said in an earlier update. It was supposed to be commissioned by the end of this year. Drenik intends to buy the biomass from Serbia’s forest management agency Srbijašume, the project page shows. It would consist of non-commercial timber from forest maintenance and forest sanitation as well as the maintenance of public green spaces.

IFC is a global development institution, part of World Bank Group, focused on the private sector in emerging markets. The latest investment will support Serbia’s transition to a resilient, low-carbon economy, it said.

The first biomass-fired CHP system in the country was commissioned in 2019 in Boljevac in the east. Green Energy Point has 2.4 MW in electricity capacity and 8.3 MW for heat.

Comments (0)

Be the first one to comment on this article.

Enter Your Comment
Please wait... Please fill in the required fields. There seems to be an error, please refresh the page and try again. Your comment has been sent.

Related Articles

Petrol obtains financing EV charging network Slovenia Croatia

Petrol obtains financing for EV charging network in Slovenia, Croatia

15 July 2024 - Slovenia-based Petrol is about to install electric vehicle charging points in 35 locations in its home market and in Croatia.

Green for Growth Fund financial impact targets 2023

Green for Growth Fund tops its financial, impact targets in 2023

15 July 2024 - The Green for Growth Fund kept mitigating climate change and promoting sustainable economic growth last year in its 18 markets

Energy permit not needed for power plants under 1 MW in BiH

15 July 2024 - The Ministry of Energy, Mining and Industry has adopted the rulebook on issuing energy permits and it entered into force on July 6

koncar croatia siemens energy

Končar, Siemens Energy launch new joint venture

15 July 2024 - Croatia’s firm Končar and Siemens Energy have signed a joint venture agreement on the establishment of the Končar - Transformer Tanks