
Vietnam faces mass bankruptcies of renewable energy producers
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The application of a new power purchasing price – which would be implemented retroactively for several years – by Vietnam Electricity, or EVN, puts 173 solar and wind projects at risk of insolvency, according to the March 24 letter the chamber made public Friday. The chamber accused the state-owned monopoly of 'a serious violation of contractual principles.'
The utility did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
'If EVN proceeds with the adjustment, which will cut 25 to 46 per cent revenue of these projects, most of them will become insolvent, potentially triggering mass bankruptcies,' it said.
The wind and solar power companies would struggle to generate enough cash for debt repayments, potentially creating 200 trillion dong (US$7.8 billion) in bad debt in the nation's financial system, according to the letter. The power companies, which collectively have invested as much as US$15 billion in Vietnam, received loans based on projected revenue from its previously agreed-upon power price, it said.
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'This would cause significant instability in both the banking sector and the financial markets in Vietnam,' the chamber latter said.

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