TALLINN, Estonia, Aug. 27, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Sunly, a leading renewable energy producer, has raised €300 million in debt financing to accelerate the construction of 1.3 GW of solar, wind, storage, and hybrid parks across the Baltics and Poland. This financing is provided by Rivage Investment via REDI HR2, its second high yield infrastructure debt fund and its Fund for Infrastructure Climate Solutions, and Copenhagen Infrastructure Partners (CIP) through its Green Credit Fund I, with additional participation from Norwegian largest pension company Kommunal Landspensjonskasse (KLP) through funds managed by CIP. The amount raised reflects strong market confidence in Sunly’s capacity to spearhead regional energy transformation.
As the EU actively works on reducing its dependance on Russian gas, it faces ongoing challenges. Despite efforts to decrease reliance, EU countries imported around 30% more natural gas from Russia in May 2024 compared to than in September 2022, reports Clean Energy Wire. In the Baltic states and Poland, Russia's significant influence in the regional energy market has historically exposed these areas to price fluctuations and supply disruptions associated with geopolitical tensions, often leading to higher energy costs for consumers than in other European nations. The upcoming desynchronization from the Russian and Belarusian electricity grid in February next year is intended to boost regional energy independence and security.
Priit Lepasepp, co-founder and CEO of Sunly, said: “This investment enables us to improve our infrastructure with new grid connections and solar parks in the Baltics, which will support our onshore wind and storage pipeline expansion. To help reduce energy costs, our focus will be on two key areas: building a hybrid pipeline with storage capabilities and advancing the electrification of heating and mobility systems, thereby diminishing our reliance on imported fossil fuels and optimising the use of local renewable resources.”
Sunly intends to develop integrated hybrid parks that combine wind, solar and energy storage batteries at single connection point and direct line to consumers. This method improves energy production stability in various weather conditions and optimises cost-efficiency by reducing grid connectivity charges – forecasted to account to more than half of the total energy cost. The approach is expected to significantly benefit consumers, particularly large industrial clients with high energy consumption, by enhancing regional energy security and operational efficiency.
Gaétane Tracz, Partner and Head of the Infrastructure Debt team at Rivage, said: “We are delighted to support Sunly’s strong leadership team through their ambitious growth trajectory and to help accelerate the construction of hybrid renewable energy parks across the Baltics and Poland. We share Sunly’s mission of contributing to produce power with purpose, to contribute to EU energy security and to deliver investments with both attractive performance and ESG impact.”
Jakob Groot, Partner at CIP and Co-Head of the CI Green Credit Fund I, said: “We are very excited to start our partnership with Sunly, and their highly experienced management team. This financing package will contribute significantly to the development and construction of renewable energy projects, supporting the decarbonisation ambitions across the Baltics and Poland, and represents an attractive investment for our Green Credit Fund I.”
Oliver Siem, Director, Investments and Operations at Kommunal Landspensjonskasse (KLP), said: “We are yet again pleased to be invited as a co-investor in a renewable energy project in Poland and the Baltics through our longstanding relationship with CIP. This is one of many steps in reaching our goal of being Paris aligned by 2050.”
One of the first projects to benefit from this financing is the 244 MW Risti solar park in Estonia, which can cover the annual electricity consumption of 55,000 households. Currently intended as a hybrid park, Sunly already has expansion plans that include onshore wind turbines and battery storage in the future.
Construction will also immediately start on four solar parks in Latvia, with a combined capacity of 553 MW. These Latvian parks are also designed as hybrids, with eventual plans to integrate wind or battery storage, or a combination of both. The 1.3 GW portfolio also includes several large hybrid solar parks in Lithuania, as well as both small and large solar parks in Poland by end of 2026.
With this investment Sunly’s expansion has been backed by a total of €765 million debt and equity capital from investors, including French fund Mirova, the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD), and various banks. In 2023, Sunly successfully raised approximately €200 million from its existing investors, the Mirova, and EBRD to further develop and construct solar and wind parks across Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, and Poland.
Notes to editor
Additional information:Anna LindpereSunly Head of Communicationsanna.lindpere@sunly.ee
+37256463229
Sunly is a renewable energy producer, developing and operating renewable energy projects across Baltics and Poland and investing in startups in the electrification sector. Sunly's core activity – renewable energy production – plays a decisive role in achieving the climate, energy security, and energy affordability goals that lie ahead in the region. Currently Sunly has 230 MW operational and 126 MW under construction solar parks, as well as a 2 MWh storage integrated into one solar park. In addition to this debt financing, Sunly is pursuing project-based senior financing to fully fund the capital expenditures required for the Risti and Latvian projects. The new 1.3 GW ventures will increase Sunly’s total renewable capacity to 1.6 GW, with an ambitious target to reach 4.6 GW of operational renewable projects by 2030.
Rivage Investment was founded in 2010, Rivage manages circa €7.7bn of assets through its complementary investment strategies across the risk-return credit spectrum, from investment grade (senior secured core infrastructure and lending to public entities) to high yield impact and growth debt focused on clean energy transition and wider decarbonisation. These strategies are underpinned by Rivage’s pioneering approach to ESG, which is embedded throughout the organisation, investment process and investment focus.
Copenhagen Infrastructure Partners was founded in 2012, Copenhagen Infrastructure Partners P/S (CIP) today is the world’s largest dedicated fund manager within greenfield renewable energy investments and a global leader in offshore wind. The funds managed by CIP focus on investments in offshore and onshore wind, solar PV, biomass and energy-from-waste, transmission and distribution, reserve capacity, storage, advanced bioenergy, and Power-to-X. CIP manages 12 funds and has to date raised approximately €28 billion for investments in energy and associated infrastructure from more than 160 international institutional investors. CIP has approximately 500 employees and 12 offices around the world.
Copenhagen Infrastructure Green Credit Fund I (CI GCF I) launched in February 2022 and has commitments of €1 billion with a further €200 million managed as co-investments. CI GCF I is CIP’s first debt fund and provides private project finance debt with subordinated risk characteristics supporting renewable energy projects globally.
Kommunal Landspensjonskasse (KLP) is Norway's largest life-insurance company. KLP provides pensions, finance and insurance services to municipalities, county authorities, health enterprises and to businesses both in the public and the private sector, and to their employees. The KLP Group has total assets of over NOK 1.000 billion. KLP supports the Paris Agreement and the 1.5-degree target. Now, the board has adopted KLP’s roadmap to net zero emissions by 2050. The roadmap describes how KLP will work towards and measure our contribution to the goals in the Paris Agreement.
Augusta acted as exclusive financial advisor to Sunly during the process. Ashurst, Gide and Ellex acted as the lenders’ legal counsels while White & Case, Sorainen and CMS represented Sunly.