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BILLIONAIRE ALLEN TO INVEST IN BANGLADESH
Reuters, May 6, 2005
The billionaire co-founder of Microsoft plans to spend $1.6 billion building
Bangladesh power and fertilizer plants, marking the second-biggest investment
into the poor but fast-growing nation.
Paul Allen, the world's seventh-richest person according
to Forbes magazine, will make the investment through Global Vulcan Energy
International, a wholly-owned subsidiary of his personal investment vehicle,
Vulcan Capital.
"We signed a memorandum of understanding on Thursday
with the U.S energy
firm, which will invest $1.6 billion in the next three years," said
Mahmudur Rahman, executive chairman of Bangladesh's Board of Investment
(BOI).
Vulcan will spend $900 million of Allen's $21 billion fortune
building a number of gas-run power plants with a total 1,800 megawatts
(MW) of capacity -- equivalent to almost half of existing national capacity.
The new plants will help meet new demand that is set to
double to 7,000 MW
by 2007, and make up a power shortfall that already stands at between
500
MW and 700 MW.
Vulcan will also build two plants with the capacity to produce
140,000 tonnes of carbon-based organic fertilizer at a cost of $200 million,
and set up a $500 million project to capture methane gas for power production
from coal mines, Mahmudur told Reuters.
Allen's injection of funds will be the second biggest in
Bangladesh behind a $2.5 billion project by India's Tata group. Together,
the two investments dwarf total foreign direct investment of 3 billion
since Bangladesh became a nation in the early 1970s.
Half of Bangladesh's population lives below the poverty
line, and the nation is home to the third highest number of poor people
in the world behind India and China, according to the World Bank. However,
GDP grew by six percent last year and is set to grow a further 5 percent
in the 2004/05 fiscal year.
Mahmudur said Vulcan's president, Ford F. Graham, and other
senior company
executives, visited proposed plant sites last week and held meetings with
Bangladeshi officials.
The firm will start a feasibility study in May, which will
be completed within the next six months.
($1=63.50 taka)
Copyright 2005 Reuters
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