Reliance Power Ltd will buy Jaiprakash Power Ventures Ltd's entire hydropower business, the companies said on Monday, in a deal that would make billionaire Anil Ambani's group the largest private hydropower provider in India.

Reliance CleanGen Ltd, which with Reliance Power is part of Ambani's Reliance Group, has signed an exclusive memorandum of understanding with Jaiprakash to buy three power plants.

Reliance's bid for the business follows the collapse last week of a plan by Jaiprakash and parent Jaiprakash Associates Ltd to sell two of the three plants for $1.6 billion to an Abu Dhabi-led consortium.

The companies did not disclose the terms of the deal but local media estimated the hydropower portfolio's value at around 120 billion rupees ($2 billion). The plants have a total capacity of nearly 1,800 megawatts.

For Reliance, whose business empire includes technology, financial services and media assets, the plants would add to about 5,000 megawatts of hydropower capacity it is already developing, the company said in a statement.

Jaiprakash, which like many Indian power and infrastructure companies is trying to strengthen its balance sheet and revive profitability, said it would use the proceeds to pay down debt.

Shares of Jaiprakash Power were 3.7 percent higher by 11:15 a.m., compared with a slight decline in the benchmark Sensex. Shares of Reliance were up 2.5 percent.

 

Related Articles

Sidley, Freshfields star in $865 million Indonesia telecom deal

by ALB |

Sidley Austin has advised Malaysia’s Axiata Group on its Indonesian subsidiary’s acquisition of Axis Telekom Indonesia from Saudi Telecom Company (STC), which was guided by Freshfields.

Oil Search fights sale of PNG gas field stake to France's Total

by Reuters |

Papua New Guinea energy company Oil Search Ltd launched a fight on Friday to contest French oil giant Total SA's purchase of a 40 percent stake in PNG's biggest undeveloped gas field.

Oman central bank sets foreign exposure caps for banks

by Reuters |

Oman's central bank has set new caps on banks' credit exposure to non-residents and funds placed abroad, giving lenders six months to comply.