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February 21, 2002 | 1750 IST
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DPC lenders to meet for 3rd day in Singapore

The meeting of foreign and domestic lenders to the collapsed Enron Corp's $2.9 billion Indian power plant will drag on for another day as no conclusion was reached on the bidding process of the plant, said an official of one of the plant's lenders on Thursday.

The discussions, which started on Wednesday, were aimed at deciding how to select a buyer for the project's 85-per cent foreign equity stake.

"There is not much to say at the moment. It looks like the meeting will continue for another day," said the official who asked not to be identified.

More than 20 lenders, including both Indian and foreign banks, have a combined exposure of nearly $1.9 billion to the project, once the showpiece of foreign investment in India.

ABN AMRO, one of the advisors, hosted the meeting.

Among major issues being discussed at the meeting was how bidders could carry out due diligence, said the source.

Several companies have made preliminary bids or "expressions of intent" for the foreign stake in Dabhol Power Co, the company set up to build and operate the 2,184 MW power plant, Enron's most valuable asset in Asia.

They will now have to submit financial bids.

Enron owns 65 per cent of DPC, General Electric Co and US contractor Bechtel Corp each own 10 per cent.

The remaining 15 per cent is held by a provincial Indian utility, the Maharashtra State Electricity Board.

The Industrial Development Bank of India, the project's lead creditor, invited preliminary bids on January 30 for the entire 85 per cent foreign stake in DPC.

Among the international bidders are British Gas, Royal Dutch/Shell and French utility Gaz de France.

Indian bidders include leading petrochemicals maker Reliance Industries Ltd, private power utilities BSES Ltd and Tata Power Co, and state-run Gas Authority of India Ltd, the country's largest natural gas distributor.

The power plant, located about 250 km south of Mumbai on the coast of the Arabian Sea, has been idle since June 2001 following a payment dispute with the Maharashtra State Electricity Board, a financially strapped state power distribution monopoly and sole customer of the Dabhol plant.

The 740-megawatt first phase started operations in May 1999 and the 1,444-MW second phase was nearly complete when construction was halted in June after the MSEB fell $240 million behind in payments for power already supplied.

YOU MAY ALSO WANT TO READ:
The Enron Saga
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Run-Up To The Budget

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