development and Financing Models used Internationally
International experience shows that there has been no single model for development of geothermal
resources. Even within a single country, various development models have been adopted, either
consecutively nationwide, or at the same time in different fields (World Bank/PPIAF 2010).
Figure 3.6 shows eight different models that have been utilized in the international practice of
geothermal power development. As the figure shows, the upstream phases of geothermal project
development rely heavily on public sector investments, while private developers tend to enter
the project at more mature phases. The project development cycle (and sometimes the broader
geothermal market structure) may be vertically integrated or separated (unbundled) into different
phases of the supply chain.
In an unbundled structure, more than one public entity or more than one private developer may be
involved in the same project at various stages. It should be noted that the involvement of the private
developer can take a number of different forms. For example, a BOT scheme may be used (the model
historically used in the Philippines before privatization of PNOC EDC), or the role of the private sector
may be limited to constructing the power plant to be owned and operated by the public utility (the
Mexican OPF model).
The financing structures and the corresponding risk allocations can vary widely. On one extreme is
Model 1, where a single national entity performs all functions, including exploration, drilling, wellfield
development, power plant design and construction, and operation of the wellfield and power plant.
This is financed either by the national government and state-owned utility, or by government in
conjunction with grants from donor nations and loans from international lenders. In this model, risk is
borne almost entirely by the national government, through its treasury or by sovereign guarantees of
loans. The burden on the public finances is reduced only by revenues earned from sale of electricity
and by grants from donor nations if available.
The other possible extreme is Model 8, exemplified by the case of the fully private development led by
the international oil company Chevron in the Philippines (Chevron 2011). Chevron has agreed to fund
the project using hydrocarbon revenue and takes the full risks from exploration to power generation.
Similar private developments can be found in Australia and in Italy where Enel Green Power develops
the project.
However, most private investors shy away from taking the full resource risks in geothermal projects.
Thus, Model 7 is a more typical case for a privately led development. In this model, government
entities perform limited exploration, the data being in the public domain and accessible by developers.
Then both public and private companies independently and competitively continue to explore, drill
wells, and, if successful, build and operate power plants, selling electricity either within a service
district or competitively into a national grid at market price. Revenues are expected to cover all
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