Water. desalination + reuse

water.d+r June 2017

Water. Desalination + reuse

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Water.desalination+reuse June 2017 Interview 9 Abengoa has been through a blazingly bad one-and-a-half years but like a phoenix rising from the ashes it is regenerating in a new and it hopes stronger form that will enable it to compete for projects in its areas of core competency in engineering, procurement, and construction, and operations and maintenance, and with water projects very much at its heart. P E D R O A L M AG R O E X E C U T I V E D I R E C T O R A B E N G OA AG UA A s comebacks go, Abengoa's has been pretty impressive. The company that has been through a traumatic one-and-a-half years, with staff at times not knowing if the business would continue to exist, in April 2017 wowed the industry with a massive €240 million contract win from Saudi Arabia's ACWA Power. The deal to add 250,000 m3/d of reverse osmosis (RO) desalination capacity at Shoaiba III power and desalination complex, south of Jeddah, marks a return to form for the Seville, Spain-based global engineering firm. And it offers a taster of the new strategy that has been put in place by the firm, "where the EPC business — engineering and construction — together with the operation and maintenance business, will be our focus," explains Pedro Almagro, who was appointed as executive director of the newly styled Abengoa Agua, promoted from his role as director of Abengoa Water US, in September 2016. The Shoaiba III announcement came hot on the news that on 31 March 2017 the company had successfully completed a financial restructuring, converting 70 per cent of debt into equity, and finalising a deal that introduces 95 per cent new ownership of the business. The company began insolvency proceedings back in November 2015, ašer failing to attract the investment that it needed to service its debt, and in March 2016, it brought forward a debt restructuring programme that was initially agreed by major creditors in August last year. To have finally completed the full financial restructuring process is a big step forward. Abengoa wants to divest certain equity stakes The problem that the restructuring sought to relieve was that Abengoa had racked up debt in the region of €9.4 billion during years of overseas expansion, particularly through developing big, capital intensive water and energy projects. Now the new strategy is to step back from investing its own capital up front, unless developers request that it takes a minority stake in a project, and instead to focus on providing contracted EPC and O&M services. To this end, the firm has restructured to bring all the people working on water projects together into one team A former director of Abengoa Water USA and Abengoa China, Pedro Almagro has worked at Abengoa, man and boy, since graduating from University of Seville in Spain under the Abengoa Agua banner. "Before, Abengoa was approaching the water market from different units inside the group. Now in the new organisation, we have unified all the water business in the same division, Abengoa Agua," says Almagro. "We now have a company that makes, in my opinion, much more sense, that will enable us to be a lot more efficient, more competitive, and to be able to provide the best service to the clients." As well as bringing together EPC and O&M services for water markets, Abengoa is looking to divest some of the equity investments that it owns in projects, including wanting to sell its 41.6 per cent stake in Atlantica Yield, the business that was created in 2014 and that owns a number of assets under operation by Abengoa in water and energy. "Atlantica Yield was our group for all the assets in operation. So now this is in the process to be sold. We believe that it is a very attractive investment for infrastructure, and pension and sovereign funds are very interested in buying it," Almagro adds. Water assets on the market include stakes in projects in Africa and India, including Chennai seawater RO desalination plant, capacity 100,000 m3/d, a project that Abengoa developed in 2008-09 and now operates, and in which it owns a 30 per cent stake. New team is dedicated to industrial markets A further feature of the operational restructuring is that Abengoa has created a team dedicated to attending to the industrial water market. While Almagro is keen to stress that Abengoa historically has lots of experience in municipal markets, he adds: "We also have references in the industrial market. This is a market that has, in my opinion, a very interesting future with a lot of growth, with the kind of projects that are high in technological content, where know-how, and doing projects more efficiently, and having economically viable solutions, all with guarantees in terms of process, is something that industrial clients need." He believes that know-how and experience of solving clients' problems is a big part of what differentiates Abengoa, and that it will prove able to add value to industrial clients. Geographically, the important areas of focus will be the Middle East, including Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates, and Oman, as well as Latin America, "Where

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