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OPIC Board Approves Largest-Ever Financing and Insurance Support in Sub-Saharan Africa, for Methanol Plant in Equatorial Guinea

WASHINGTON, D.C. June 14, 2000 - The Board of Directors of the Overseas Private Investment Corporation (OPIC) today approved the agency's largest-ever loan to a project in sub-Saharan Africa, a $173 million guaranty for the construction, ownership and operation of a methanol plant in the West African nation of Equatorial Guinea. The Board also approved up to $200 million in political risk insurance for the project.

"This project is a leading example of OPIC's concerted effort to play a more instrumental role in sub-Saharan Africa. This project represents a major investment by substantive U.S. sponsors in the region and is a strong credit in the oil and gas industry," said OPIC President and CEO George Muņoz. "It contributes simultaneously to private sector development in Equatorial Guinea and the improvement of local air quality, by processing gas that would otherwise be flared."

The plant will be located on the island of Bioko in Equatorial Guinea and will be managed by the Atlantic Methanol Production Company, which is owned by CMS Enterprises and Nobel Affiliates and the Guinean government. With a total project cost of $450 million, the plant will generate 2,500 metric tons per day of methanol from natural gas.

"This project will improve the skill level of the local workforce through a training program, and will create 85 permanent jobs in Equatorial Guinea," Muņoz said, noting that International Labor Organization labor standards will be followed and thus set an example of good labor practices in the country.

Muņoz praised Board member Ambassador Alan P. Larson, who is Acting US Under Secretary of State for Economic, Business and Agricultural Affairs, for providing valuable advice and supervision of the workers' rights monitoring process. "

Ambassador Larson's strong commitment to workers' rights on this project has given OPIC an added measure of confidence that it will serve as a model for developing countries eager to attract US investment," Muņoz said. Ambassador Larson said, "While the Board is excited to provide Equatorial Guinea this strong opportunity for economic development, we are equally pleased to ensure that it meets internationally-recognized standards for treatment of workers. This should demonstrate that, far from being mutually exclusive, business opportunity and respect for rights are two sides of the same developmental coin. This project moved forward because of the cooperation between governments, US government agencies, and the private sector sponsor."

"On the American side, it will result in projected US procurement of $280.5 million over five years and will create approximately 766 American jobs. The project will generate a positive US net balance of payments of $165 million during its first five years," Muņoz added.

Muņoz added that 1999 was a record year for OPIC's efforts to attract US investment to Africa, tripling OPIC business on the continent to a level higher than its portfolio in Asia or the countries of the former Soviet Union. OPIC's loans and political risk insurance supported three times more business projects in Africa in 1999 than in 1998 and its total dollar support for American investments in Africa rose by more than 36 percent.

OPIC is a self-sustaining federal agency that sells investment services to small, medium and large American businesses expanding into some 140 developing nations and emerging markets around the world. OPIC's political risk insurance, project finance and investment funds fill a commercial void, create a level playing field for US businesses and support development in emerging economies. Since 1971, OPIC has supported nearly $130 billion worth of investments that will generate over $61 billion in U.S. exports and create or support more than 242,000 American jobs.

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