Buch, Englisch, 864 Seiten, Format (B × H): 175 mm x 241 mm, Gewicht: 1610 g
Law and Practice
Buch, Englisch, 864 Seiten, Format (B × H): 175 mm x 241 mm, Gewicht: 1610 g
ISBN: 978-0-19-895052-3
Verlag: Oxford University Press
Now in its fourth edition, International Project Finance is the definitive guide to legal and practical issues in international projects. It explores the application of English and New York law in cross-border documentation and financing projects in civil law jurisdictions.
The volume examines various funding sources, including banking, international bond documentation, and Islamic financing practices, addressing their legal and documentation challenges. It also provides insights into managing project defaults and workouts, and covers the roles of export credit agencies and development finance institutions, along with extensive dispute resolution strategies.
Beyond the basics of structuring and documenting project financings, it delves into sector-specific differences in energy transition, transportation, infrastructure/Public Private Partnerships, conventional, renewable, and nuclear power, mining, and oil and gas.
New chapters focus on environmental and social considerations in project finance transactions and the emerging energy transition sector. The new edition includes broader perspectives on project finance in civil code jurisdictions in the Middle East and Latin America.
This book offers a thorough understanding of international project finance, including practical guidance on identifying and assessing project risk, with relevant documentation like risk matrices and checklists. With its focus on international projects and practical application of the law, International Project Finance: Law and Practice is an essential reference for practitioners in the field.
Weitere Infos & Material
- 1: John Dewar: Approaching Legal Issues in a Project Finance Transaction
- 2: Aled Davies and Andrew Pendleton: Project Participants and Structures
- 3: Munib Hussain and David Thomas: Sources of Funding
- 4: John Dewar and Mai Mitsumori-Miller: Project Risks
- 5: John Dewar, Alex Brightman, and Ignatius Quin: Allocation of Risks in Project Documentation
- 6: Matt Ahrens, Thomas Goslin, and Allison Sloto: Environmental and Social Issues in Project Finance
- 7: Ian Catterall, Sean Jukes, and Yi Ming Chan: Insurance
- 8: Vicky May, Seyda Duman, and Chrisangelina Lo: Principal Loan Finance Documentation
- 9: Alec Borisoff, Andrew Pendleton, and Lewis Blundell: Official Funding Sources: Export Credit Agencies
- 10: John Dewar, Harriet Ohemeng, and Abdullah Geelah: Official Funding Sources: Multilateral and Other Development Finance Institutions
- 11: Tim Peterson, Apostolos Gkoutzinis, and Rebecca Marques: Documentation of Project Bonds
- 12: Munib Hussain and Noor Maraghi: Islamic Project Finance
- 13: Rachel Croft and Samuel Forsyth: Ancillary Finance Documentation
- 14: Jean-Renaud Cazali, Ilhem Haouas, Noor Maraghi, and Walter Piazza: Project Finance in Civil Law Jurisdictions
- 15: International Projects - Sector Focus
- 15A: Matthew Brown and Ishaï Wodon: Energy Transition
- 15B: Aled Davies and James Orme: Oil and Gas
- 15C: Alec Borisoff, Emily Whittaker, Séverine Losembe and Rachel Tay: Mining Projects
- 15D: James Murray and Andrew Gibb: Conventional Power
- 15E: Allan Marks, Jenna Darler, and Christopher Esposito: Renewable Energy
- 15F: Paul Murphy and Seyda Duman: Financing Nuclear Power Projects
- 15G: Allan Marks, Timothy Wendling, and Sean O'Neill: Infrastructure/Public Private Partnerships
- 16: Kate Colman and Seyda Duman: Defaults and Workouts: Restructuring Project Financings
- 17: Tom Canning, Viren Mascarenhas, Kamel Aitelaj, and Vasiliki Katsarou: Dispute Resolution in Project Finance Transactions




