Company Completes $305M Financing for 100MW Solar Project in Puerto Rico

Source: Streetwise Reports 05/30/2018

The firm is on the inside track to establish a major solar farm in Puerto Rico, and obtaining financing brings it one step closer to the project’s financial close, which could be a major rerating event.

Puerto Rico’s power grid was severely damaged by Hurricane Maria last September. Energy prices on the island are some of the highest in the world, with much of the electricity generated by antiquated diesel oil-powered plants. Against this background, a number of large-scale solar electricity generation plants are planned.

Greenbriar Capital Corp. (GRB:TSX.V; GEBRF:OTC), one of the two remaining independent power producing companies trading on the TSX Venture Exchange, just announced it has executed a $265 million mandate agreement with Pegasus Renewable Energy and Sustainable Infrastructure Credit Advisors LP, an affiliate of Pegasus Renewable Energy and Sustainable Infrastructure Credit Fund LP (RESIC). Along with a $50 million agreement with the same firm announced on May 1, this arrangement more than completes the $305 million financing necessary to construct the 100 MW Montalva solar project in Puerto Rico.

Under the terms of the agreement, and subject to certain conditions, Greenbriar will issue to Pegasus two million common share purchase warrants at a price of CA$1.00, exercisable over a period of five years.

“Greenbriar’s stock is regarded as fundamentally one of the best investments we have come across.” – Clive Maund

According to Greenbriar, “the purpose of the mandate is to structure and provide the entire and complete capital requirements of the US$305 million Montalva Project financing package.”

At the end of April, the Financial Oversight and Management Board (FOMB), a body established by the U.S. Congress “to recommend and expedite critical energy and infrastructure projects” in Puerto Rico, approved the Montalva Solar Farm to proceed to the next stage.

PV Magazine noted on May 8 that a “100 MW (AC) project is being developed by Canada’s Greenbriar Capital Corp through the unit PBJL Energy Corporation. The Montalva Solar Facility would be located between the municipalities of Guanica, Lajas and Barrio de Montalva, in the southwest of the island. ‘The Project is located in an area having among the highest, if not the highest, solar insolation in Puerto Rico,’ the authority said in its document.”

The receipt of the funding mandate now advances the Montalva project one step closer to execution and financial close.

“We expect the financial close to occur in the first quarter of 2019,” Jeffrey J. Ciachurski, CEO and director of Greenbriar Capital, told Streetwise Reports. “With the financial close, most companies trade based on the NPV of the project.”

A valuation report, ordered by a judge and released publicly, valued the Montalva project at a NPV $191 million. At 18 million shares of Greenbriar outstanding, that would result in a value of over $10 per share.

Only two independent solar power producers trade on the TSX Venture Exchange, Etrion SA (ETN:TSX) and Greenbriar Capital. Etrion, which has developed solar projects in Japan and Chile, trades at CA$0.28, has 334 million shares outstanding, and has a CA$95 million market cap, but Etrion has no projects deemed a Critical Project in Puerto Rico.

Greenbriar has 17 million shares outstanding, is trading at CA$1.02, and has a CA$18 million market cap. Greenbriar was spun out of Western Wind, which traded on the TSX Venture Exchange, after it was acquired by Brookfield Renewable Energy Partners LP for $420 million in 2013.

Other independent renewable power producers trading on the TSX Venture Exchange have been acquired. Alterra Power Corp., a renewable energy company founded by Ross J. Beaty, was bought out by Innergex earlier this year, at a 58% premium to the stock price.

Also this year, in April, U.S. Geothermal Inc. was purchased by Ormat Technologies Inc. for approximately $110 million.

In 2013, Capstone Infrastructure Corp. acquired Sprott Power Corp. for $70 million.

As major as it is, the Montalva Solar Farm isn’t the only project in Greenbriar’s pipeline. The company, through its Realblock subsidiary, is advancing the first publicly traded real estate blockchain enterprise. Landmark Title Insurance of Phoenix and Title Security of Arizona have both announced that they will incorporated the disruptive technology into their operations.

Greenbriar noted that these two companies were responsible for over 20,000 real estate transactions in 2017 and underwrote title insurance valued at over US$3 billion. Real estate transactions are still stuck in the stone age, with it taking days for transactions to complete. The use of blockchain technology can bring security and transparency to these transactions, and remove much of the inefficiency, as well as reduce costs.

The program was developed in conjunction with Professor Todd Taylor, the founder of the Blockchain Lab at Arizona State University.

The value of the program was underlined by Title Security’s CEO, Tommy Sullivan, who noted, “The addition of Landmark Title means that the risk-removing, and time-saving attributes of RealBlock will now be used in over 25 offices in the state’s two largest counties. Based on the feedback I’ve received from other escrow and title agencies…we expect many more to sign on with RealBlock.”

Multi-faced Greenbriar also is working on a smart glass that darkens or lightens glass instantly using liquid crystal technology, based on technology developed in Israel and Korea.

Greenbriar has caught the attention of technical analyst Clive Maund.
Writing on CliveMaund.com in April, Maund noted that “In this increasingly difficult environment for investors, Greenbriar Capital looks like a real standout, with its excellent fundamental prospects and still very cheap stock, which won’t be cheap for much longer.”

Maund enumerated the many facets of the company. “Greenbriar and its predecessor have had a presence on Puerto Rico for about 10 years – long before the devastation of Hurricane Maria and even the financial crisis on the island, and has owned a $1.9 billion solar electrical generation contract for 6 years.” Maund noted. “Greenbriar has already made a considerable investment in its Montalva solar project on the island, but due to …read more

From:: The Energy Report