Odyssey Energy Seeks US$500 million to Build Out Pipeline of 550 Mini–Grids

Odyssey Energy Solutions, a Colorado-based renewable energy investment platform, is seeking US$500 million for a pipeline of 550 mini-grids across Africa, Asia and Latin America.

 

If funded, the projects could add up to 150 megawatts of solar capacity and 275,000 connections across 21 countries, including Cameroon, Cape Verde, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Ethiopia, Ghana, Haiti, India and Kenya, Odyssey said in a press release.

 

Around 50 developers have listed projects on the Odyssey platform, with individual project values ranging from US$40,000 to US$3 million.

 

To speed up the funding of these projects, Odyssey is looking to roll them into portfolio offerings and at the same time provide mini-grid structured financing facilities, said CEO and co-founder Emily McAteer.

 

Odyssey will be announcing “a major financing facility” in Nigeria within the next month, she said. “Our goal is to make it very easy for project developers to get the donor money which is available, participate in these financing facilities and get money moving in the sector.”

 

Ms McAteer started Odyssey along with co-founder Cathy Zoi, the current CEO of EVgo and former Assistant Secretary for Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy at the US Department of Energy, after running SunEdison’s Frontier Power mini-grid business.

 

Odyssey said mini-grids are the least-cost option for bringing electricity to more than 70 percent of the one billion people worldwide living without access to power.

 

Up to 200,000 mini-grids will be needed to lift these people, most of whom live in rural areas in sub-Saharan Africa and Asia, out of energy poverty, according to Odyssey. New projects are being added to the Odyssey platform every day, Ms McAteer said.

 

Funding them is hard, though, because of their size and risk profile. Most investors are looking to fund US$3 million to US$5 million on single projects which have a clearly defined risk profile, said Ms McAteer. This makes it easy to strike deals without spending too much on due diligence.

 

Mini-grid deals, on the other hand, involve a lot of research for a relatively small investment, which puts off traditional investors.

 

Odyssey aims to overcome this problem by providing all the due diligence data which investors need and making it easy to combine individual projects into larger investment portfolios.

 

“That’s something which has been really hard to do without software,” said Ms McAteer.

 

The data on projects includes how much concessionary money is required, versus commercial capital. Some of Odyssey’s projects are commercially viable, but others require grant money for investors to reach a reasonable internal rate of return (IRR).

 

For each project, investors can see how much grant money, debt and developer and investor equity might be required. In addition to investors, Odyssey works with donors and development finance institutions.

 

“We are seeing, particularly in West Africa, projects which are really promising and have high projected IRRs and decent paybacks,” said Ms McAteer. Such projects would make sense for investors wanting to expand energy access but also make returns, she said.

 

Odyssey’s big mini-grid selloff comes amid growing interest in the off-grid energy sector. In sub-Saharan Africa, mini-grids have received more than US$250 million in committed public debt, as part of more than US$4 billion in total investment.

 

Source: Global Energy World