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Électricité du Laos

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Électricité du Laos
IndustryEnergy
Headquarters,
Key people
Bounoum SYVANPHENG
Bounsalong Southidara
Lattana Pathoumvanh
SubsidiariesEDL-Generation Company
Websitehttp://www.edl.com.la/

Électricité du Laos (EDL) (Lao: ໄຟຟ້າລາວ) is the state corporation of Laos that owns and operates the country's electricity generation, electricity transmission and electricity distribution assets. The company also manages the import and export of electricity from the national electricity grid of the country. EDL was founded in 1959 and is headquartered in Vientiane.

In July 2010, the International Finance Corporation loaned $15 million to Electricite du Laos for the expansion of electricity networks and substations in rural areas of Laos. The company has also received debt financing from the Asian Development Bank.

By 2020, the government expects to provide electricity to 90 percent of Lao households.[1]

In September 2020, Reuters reported that the Électricité du Laos and the China Southern Power Grid Company (CSPGC) established the joint venture Electricite du Laos Transmission Company Ltd (EDLT) that has control of the country's power grid, as well as the rights to purchase and sell power in Laos to stave off a debt default to the Chinese government.[2] The CSPGC owns a majority share of the EDLT, but the Lao and Chinese governments have made a written agreement in which the Lao government will gradually buy Chinese shares back.[3] A Lao official from the Ministry of Energy and Mines reasoned that "The new company will connect the [EDL and China Southern] power grids together. It’s all about capital. It is necessary to join the two grids".[3]

EDL-Generation Company

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EDL logo.

EDL-Generation Company Limited (EDL-Gen) was incorporated in 2010 and operates as a subsidiary of Electricite Du Laos. Laos is the only net exporter of power in the Mekong Region and has been nicknamed the "Battery of Asia", selling power to Thailand, Vietnam, Cambodia, and China.[4] EDL-Gen plans to double its hydropower generation capacity by 2016, and currently operates seven plants totalling 387 MW:

Nam Ngum 1 Dam

In June 2012, EDL-Gen approved the transfer of shares in four Independent Power Producers owned by Electricite du Laos to EDL-Gen: 60% of shares in Theun-Hinbeun (300 MW), 10% of shares in Nam Leuk 1-2 (10 MW), 25% of shares in Nam Ngum 2 (153.75 MW), and 20% of shares in Houay Ho (30 MW). The transfer of 4 IPPs will increase EDL-Gen's total capacity to 881 MW. EDL-Gen also plans to purchase two hydropower plants from Electricite du Laos that are currently under construction: Nam Khan 2 (126 MW) and Huaylamphan Nhai (88 MW).

On January 11, 2011, EDL-Generation Company participated in an initial public offering on the Lao Securities Exchange (LSX),[5] becoming the first company to list on the country's stock exchange. Initial investors in the IPO included frontier markets private equity firm Leopard Capital, Thai energy company Ratchaburi Holding, Thai state-owned bank Krung Thai Bank, and Vietnamese investment firm Dragon Capital.[6] Despite the LSX's limited liquidity, at the end of its first week of trading, EDL-Gen was up 30% from the IPO price at 5,600 Lao kip (LAK) ($0.69).


References

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  1. ^ "IFC in East Asia and the Pacific". www.ifc.org.
  2. ^ Zhai, Keith; Johnson, Kay; Wongcha-Um, Panu (September 4, 2020). Tostevin, Matthew; Cameron-Moore, Simon (eds.). "Exclusive: Taking power - Chinese firm to run Laos electric grid amid default warnings". Reuters. Archived from the original on September 8, 2020.
  3. ^ a b "Financially Strapped Laos Partners with Chinese Company to Manage Power Grid". Radio Free Asia.
  4. ^ "Laos hydropower a 'battery' for power-hungry region". BBC. December 10, 2010. Retrieved 31 May 2013.
  5. ^ "Asia Times Online :: Southeast Asia news and business from Indonesia, Philippines, Thailand, Malaysia and Vietnam". January 19, 2011. Archived from the original on 2011-01-19.
  6. ^ "Dragon Capital Clean Energy PIPE in Laos". AVCJ. Retrieved 31 May 2013.
[edit]
 'Providing electricity to poor rural provinces of Lao PDR', article at World Bank retrieved 14 Jan 2008