The company structured the transaction as a green bond aligned with its long-term growth strategy, directing proceeds toward renewable generation projects and energy storage infrastructure. MSU Green Energy operates a solar portfolio concentrated in northern Argentina, including the 130 MW Pampa del Infierno facility in Chaco, the 40 MW Las Lomas plant in La Rioja, the 40 MW Villa Ángela project also in Chaco, and smaller installations in Formosa totaling 37 MW combined. The company secured two battery energy storage system projects through the AlmaGBA procurement process: 150 MW at Matheu serving Edenor’s network and 30 MW at Oro Verde, both strategically positioned in the Buenos Aires metropolitan area.
MSU Green Energy has established corporate power purchase agreements with major industrial consumers. Telecom Argentina contracted 60,000 MWh annually for ten years from Pampa del Infierno, while Volkswagen Group Argentina signed a decade-long supply agreement drawing from both Pampa del Infierno and Las Lomas to power its Pacheco industrial complex. Bayer committed to sourcing over half its annual consumption at the María Eugenia plant in Rojas from MSU facilities.
Founder Manuel Santos Uribelarrea characterized the financing as enabling acceleration of multi-decade infrastructure projects, while company president Guillermo Marseillan described the transaction as consolidating a trajectory that positions MSU Green Energy to access international capital markets for its next development phase. The company’s asset base includes the El Chocón-Arroyito hydroelectric complex in Comahue region, contributing to total installed capacity of 1,897 MW across hydroelectric, solar, and storage technologies.
This article was curated and published as part of our South American energy market coverage.
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