staging

Investors

Earlier this year, the Tokyo-led institution approved its first co-investment alongside the Beijing-based AIIB.
The Canadian pension has tapped the former head of Coloradoโ€™s P3 agency to head Roadis, a platform it carved out from Spain's Isolux Corsรกnย in May.
The companyโ€™s $31m investment comes two months after the US promised to help India meet its 175GW renewables target by 2022.
The Public Officials Benefit Association of South Korea will invest A$60m in the A$1.5bn vehicle, which is due to reach a second close this month.
The transaction forms part of NTPC's plans to issue $4bn of medium-term notes to fund its solar and wind projects in India.
Asiaโ€™s largest oil refiner is looking for no more than 15 investors who could each inject at least $150m into its Sichuan-to-Shanghai project.
In its first report as a listed company, the Danish utility said the UK's decision to leave the EU wouldn't yield 'fundamental changes' to the offshore wind sector.
The deterioration of public water infrastructure in the US and a decline of federal funding is prompting a shift towards greater private participation in the sector, a study finds.
Cube Hydro Partners, the US firmโ€™s hydroelectric platform, has grown its generating capacity to 159MW since launching last January.
The life insurer has made a direct investment in a bundle of solar assets managed by fintech company CleanCapital.
StepStone tapped its latest secondaries fund to acquire George Kaiser Family Foundationโ€™s entire stake in the six-asset vehicle.
The New Zealand firm's latest PPP fund is part of a consortium that will undertake the 18.5km Puhoi to Warkworth project in the Northland.
The Toronto-based firm, 'taking a contrarian view' on Brazil, also has its sights on power transmission assets in the South American country.
There are now over 100 companies focusing on off-grid solar systems in Africa, part of a global distributed solar industry that could reach $3.1bn by 2020.
The UKโ€™s project finance sector should remain unscathed from consequences the countryโ€™s economy may suffer post-referendum, S&P finds.
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