staging

Investors

FEIH, the pairโ€™s three-year-old tie-up, will absorb the assets operated by ENGIE-owned developer Maia Eolis into its 810MW portfolio.
A team led by Indonesiaโ€™s Star Energy is set to buy the US majorโ€™s geothermal assets in two countries in a deal reportedly valued at $3bn.
The transaction will allow Spainโ€™s Abertis to enter the Indian market at a time when it is looking to expand its Asian footprint.
Former domestic alternatives division head Lee Su-Cheol will replace Yang Young-Sig, who left the world's third-largest pension last month.
Funds raised in the 2000s are reaching the end of their lives, but not every LP wants its money back. In 2017, innovative structures will continue to be created to keep the remainers on board.
The emergence of energy storage as a workable and investible technology has the potential to revolutionise the energy infrastructure market.
Traditional hubs of greenfield infrastructure activity are hitting a sticky patch across the continent. In 2017, investors would be wise to explore new frontiers.
Renewables auctions from Canada to Chile are growing in number and provide investors with a chance to lay their hands on a large number of contracts to develop clean energy assets.
The US and Canada go into 2017 after an uptick in infrastructure investments last year. That's likely to continue, but the path will probably look different for each country.
In addition to mega-privatisations, Australia counts a solid pipeline of large-scale, complex PPP projects. Notwithstanding wobbles on the political front, transport and healthcare are set to benefit in 2017.
The Californian pension made the move to generate additional cash flows in what it described as a 'very challenging environment'.
The new vehicle will be used to acquire assets, including Belfast City Airport and a UK utility, from an EISER fund that is nearing the end of its life.
The firm has divested 14.3% of the business, which it originally invested in in 2005, through what it described as an โ€˜over-subscribed offeringโ€™.
The $325m Silverton project will be the first greenfield asset backed by the Powering Australian Renewables Fund, through which the partners aim to deploy up to A$3bn.
A local utility and two international developers have their eyes set on wind and solar projects in Changhua, the latest investors to be scouting the island for large-scale renewables deals.
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