P.A. Turkey

Rosatom signs 9.1bn dollar loan deal to fund Turkish nuclear plant

Rosatom, which has been wiring money to Ankara to shore up Turkey’s depleted foreign currency reserves, signs deal with Gazprombank

A Russian state-owned company signed a $9.1bn loan deal with Gazprombank in August to fund the construction and development of Turkey’s Akkuyu nuclear power plant, according to the official documents.

In a public announcement on Wednesday, Rosatom Corp published the deal signed on 3 August, which opens a line of credit to finance Akkuyu Nuclear JSC, its subsidiary in Turkey.

The official documents suggest the money would be used for the following:

The draft deal published in July included a special section suggesting that the intended use of the credit line would be “temporary placement in deposits, purchase of dollar bonds of the Ministry of Treasury and Finance of the Republic of Turkey”.

However, the final deal doesn’t specify such a condition but only says the loans would be temporarily placed in “an account that will be pledged in favour of the lender”.

This still opens the way for Akkuyu to purchase Turkish treasury dollar bonds or deposit them in the treasury and pledge them to the lender.

 

 

The privately owned Gazprombank, which is headquartered in Moscow, still has access to the Swift international payment system, which Russia was kicked out of after the invasion of Ukraine. This means the bank could wire money to Akkuyu’s dollar and euro account with the Turkish state-owned Ziraat Bank.

Bloomberg reported last month that Rosatom had decided to wire $15bn to Turkey for the construction of the $20bn Akkuyu nuclear power plant, citing officials who said that an initial $5bn had already been received.

The officials suggested the move was a goodwill gesture by Russian President Vladimir Putin to thank Turkey for the breakthrough Ukraine grain deal brokered by Ankara in July.

The Turkish central bank’s gross reserves increased by $7.4bn during the week ending on 5 August, the biggest increase in 12 months, according to data from the monetary authority. That is the same date Gazprombank signed the deal with Akkuyu.

The Turkish government is in dire need of foreign funding as a result of its rapidly evaporating foreign currency reserves.

 

 

middleeasteye.net