1. How the Project Finance Structure Works
Project finance is a long-term financing structure for capital-intensive assets in which a special purpose vehicle (SPV) is created to develop, own, and operate the project as a standalone legal entity, isolating project risk from the balance sheets of the sponsors. Lenders advance debt based on projected cash flow analysis, security over project assets and contracts, and the risk-allocation framework established in the financing agreements.
Global project finance loan volume regularly reaches hundreds of billions of dollars annually, reflecting the structure's importance in infrastructure and energy development worldwide. The debt-to-equity ratio in most transactions positions senior debt at 60 to 80 percent of total project costs, with the balance funded by sponsor equity.
What Is an Spv and How Does Non-Recourse Financing Work?
A special purpose vehicle is an independent legal entity created specifically to develop, finance, construct, and operate a single project, ringfencing its assets, contracts, and liabilities from the sponsors' other businesses. After completion, lenders generally rely primarily on project cash flows and collateral, although sponsors typically provide broader support during construction through completion guarantees, cost overrun undertakings, or limited recourse arrangements that narrow once the project satisfies agreed performance tests.
The SPV enters into all key project contracts directly, including the construction contract, the offtake agreement, the fuel or feedstock supply agreement, and the operating and maintenance agreement. Each contract must be carefully structured to ensure the cash flow projections underpinning the debt underwriting are legally enforceable and capable of withstanding lender due diligence.
How Does Project Finance Differ from Corporate Finance?
Project finance differs from corporate finance in that lenders evaluate the projected revenues and risk profile of a discrete asset rather than the borrower's balance sheet, earnings history, or general creditworthiness. Senior lenders often require projected debt service coverage ratio (DSCR) levels above 1.0x, with common thresholds around 1.2x to 1.5x depending on sector, jurisdiction, offtaker credit, and construction risk.
This structure is used for power generation facilities, toll roads, pipelines, ports, airports, water treatment plants, offshore wind installations, and mining operations, all of which share the characteristic of generating predictable long-term revenues once operational. The project finance structure also allows sponsors to keep project debt off their consolidated balance sheets in certain accounting treatments, which is an additional commercial reason for its widespread adoption.
2. Key Contracts and Closing Documents in a Project Finance Deal
A project finance transaction closes only when an extensive set of interlocking project contracts, financing documents, security instruments, and legal opinions have been executed and delivered to the satisfaction of all lenders. The financing agreement sets the conditions for drawdown, repayment, financial covenants, events of default, and cash flow controls.
In many international deals, the agreement follows Loan Market Association (LMA) or equivalent market standards. The cash flow waterfall, which dictates the order in which revenues are applied to operating costs, debt service, reserve accounts, and sponsor distributions, is one of the most commercially sensitive provisions in the entire document set and must be carefully aligned with the underlying project economics.
How Do Epc Contracts, Ppas, Offtake Agreements, and Concessions Allocate Risk?
The engineering, procurement, and construction (EPC) contract governs the design and delivery of the project on a fixed-price, date-certain basis, allocating construction risk to the contractor through performance bonds, liquidated damages for delay, and defects liability obligations. The power purchase agreement (PPA) or equivalent offtake contract commits a creditworthy counterparty to purchase the project's output at a defined price over a specified term, creating the revenue certainty that underpins the lenders' repayment analysis.
The concession agreement or government support agreement, where applicable, grants the SPV the right to develop and operate the asset on public land or under a regulatory license. Stabilization and change-in-law clauses in concession agreements seek to allocate the economic consequences of adverse legal or regulatory changes, but their enforceability depends on governing law, host-state law, and the exact drafting rather than literally freezing the applicable legal framework.
What Are Facility Agreements, Security Packages, Dsra, and Intercreditor Terms?
The security package granted to lenders generally includes a pledge over the SPV's shares, a charge or mortgage over project assets and real property, an assignment of key project contracts and insurance policies, and a security interest over all project bank accounts. The debt service reserve account (DSRA), typically sized to cover six months of scheduled debt service, provides lenders with a liquidity buffer against short-term cash flow shortfalls.
Direct agreements with each key contract counterparty give lenders notice of defaults, cure periods, and step-in rights, reducing the risk that an EPC contract, PPA, concession, or supply agreement is terminated before lenders can intervene. The intercreditor agreement governs voting thresholds for amendment, waiver, and enforcement decisions among the lender group, and achieving required majorities for a restructuring is frequently one of the most challenging practical aspects of any distressed project finance situation.
| Contract or Document | Party | Key Risk Allocated | Lender Protection |
|---|---|---|---|
| EPC Contract | Contractor | Construction cost and schedule overrun | Performance bonds, liquidated damages |
| PPA or Offtake Agreement | Offtaker | Revenue certainty and dispatch risk | Direct agreement, step-in rights |
| Fuel or Feed Supply Agreement | Supplier | Input availability and price | Take-or-pay obligation, price indexing |
| O&M Agreement | Operator | Operating cost and performance | Performance guarantees, insurance |
| Concession or License | Government or Regulator | Political and regulatory risk | Change-in-law provisions, stabilization |
| Facility Agreement | Lenders | Debt service and covenant compliance | Security package, DSRA, waterfall |
What Legal Counsel Reviews before and at Financial Close
Legal counsel in a project finance transaction coordinates project contracts, lender due diligence, permitting, security documents, direct agreements, conditions precedent, and closing deliverables to confirm that the project is financeable and that lender protections are enforceable. The legal role is not limited to drafting: it includes identifying the points at which the deal can fail and structuring protections that hold across construction, operations, and potential enforcement.
Conditions precedent are the documents, approvals, permits, legal opinions, insurance certificates, and contract confirmations that must be delivered before lenders are required to fund the loan. A failure to satisfy any material condition precedent at closing can delay drawdown, trigger renegotiation of terms, or cause the transaction to collapse entirely, which is why conditions precedent management is a central task of project finance counsel throughout the closing process.
Many U.S.-linked project finance transactions use New York law for financing documents, while Washington D.C. .emains important for World Bank, IFC, DFC, and other development finance stakeholders whose requirements counsel must account for alongside domestic regulatory obligations.
What Does Counsel Review during Due Diligence and at Financial Close?
Project finance due diligence covers the legal validity and enforceability of the SPV structure and governance documents, the risk allocation and performance obligations in each project contract, the adequacy of the security package and its perfection under applicable law, the status of all required permits and environmental approvals, and compliance with sanctions, anti-money laundering requirements, and foreign investment restrictions. Counsel also reviews legal opinions to confirm consistency between projected revenues, contractual commitments, and lender covenants.
Financial close occurs when all conditions precedent have been satisfied or waived, all transaction documents have been executed, and lenders are obligated to make the initial drawdown. These provisions should be reviewed early because unclear completion tests can create disputes at the transition from construction to operations, with lenders, sponsors, and contractors potentially holding conflicting interpretations of whether the project has achieved commercial operations status.
How Do Direct Agreements and Step-in Rights Protect Lenders
A direct agreement is a tripartite contract between the project company, a key contract counterparty, and the lenders, giving lenders notice of any default by the project company under that contract and a cure period before the counterparty is entitled to terminate. Step-in rights allow lenders or their nominee to assume the project company's position under a key contract after a default, preserving the contract and the project's revenue stream while lenders decide how to proceed.
These provisions should be reviewed early in the transaction because unclear cure periods and step-in mechanics can create disputes at precisely the moment when speed of response is critical. Counsel with experience in project and infrastructure finance will confirm that step-in rights are consistent across all direct agreements and do not conflict with insolvency law in the jurisdiction where the project is located.
| Deal Stage | Legal Counsel Role | Key Documents | Main Risk |
|---|---|---|---|
| Project development | Advise on structure, land rights, permits | Development agreements, land access, MOU | Unfinanceable structure |
| SPV formation | Draft constitutional documents, governance | Articles, shareholder agreement, board resolutions | Tax exposure, structural defect |
| Contract negotiation | Negotiate EPC, PPA, concession, O&M | Project contracts, direct agreements | Unallocated risks, incomplete cure rights |
| Lender due diligence | Respond to lender queries, prepare legal opinions | Disclosure letter, legal opinions, permits | Adverse findings delaying close |
| Security package | Draft and perfect all security instruments | Share pledge, asset charges, account security | Unperfected or unenforceable security |
| Conditions precedent | Track and satisfy all CP items | CP checklist, executed documents, certificates | Failed conditions blocking drawdown |
| Financial close | Coordinate final execution and funding | Executed document set, drawdown notice | Timing failure, last-minute disputes |
| Construction monitoring | Advise on claims, variations, and force majeure | EPC change orders, insurance notifications | Cost overrun, delay claims |
| Distress and workout | Advise on defaults, waivers, enforcement | Waiver letters, forbearance agreements | Intercreditor deadlock, security enforcement |
If your transaction is approaching financial close or facing a covenant breach, consulting counsel with experience in project development and finance at the earliest stage preserves options that become unavailable once defaults are declared or counterparties exercise termination rights.
3. Legal and Regulatory Risks Across the Project Life Cycle
Project finance transactions involve a distinctive set of legal and regulatory risks that must each be identified, allocated contractually, and mitigated through insurance or credit enhancement before senior lenders will commit to financing. Political risk, construction risk, offtake risk, permitting risk, and environmental and social compliance risk are the primary categories, and each requires a different combination of contractual, insurance, and legal solutions.
The Equator Principles apply globally across industry sectors to covered project finance transactions, including project finance advisory mandates where total project capital costs are US$10 million or more. Where Equator Principles Financial Institutions participate as lenders, compliance with the framework's environmental and social standards can become a practical financing condition, and counsel must advise on environmental impact assessment requirements, community consultation obligations, and regulatory conditions attached to project approval.
How Are Political, Permitting, Environmental, and Currency Risks Managed?
Political risk refers to the possibility that government action, including expropriation, currency inconvertibility, or failure to honor contractual commitments, will impair debt service. Political risk insurance, available from the Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency (MIGA) and private insurers, provides coverage against specified political risk events and is frequently a condition precedent to financial close on cross-border transactions.
Environmental permitting timelines are one of the most common sources of delay in project finance transactions, because a missing or contested permit can prevent construction from commencing or trigger a delay event of default. Renewable energy and infrastructure projects increasingly include ESG reporting, environmental covenants, and sustainability-linked obligations as part of the financing package, reflecting both lender policy requirements and the expectations of institutional co-investors.
What Construction Risk, Force Majeure, and Completion Testing Issues Arise?
The construction phase carries the highest concentration of risk in any project finance transaction, because significant capital is being deployed before the project generates any revenue. EPC contractor default, force majeure events, permitting delays, and cost overruns are the most common triggers of construction-phase disputes.
Completion tests specify the measurable performance standards, testing procedures, cure rights, and consequences of failed tests that determine when the project transitions from construction to operations and when construction-phase sponsor support obligations are released. An independent technical advisor (ITA) appointed by lenders monitors construction progress, certifies drawdown requests, and reports on compliance with the construction program. For energy project finance transactions in particular, grid connection, commissioning testing, and regulatory consent timelines must all be coordinated with the completion test mechanics.
4. Frequently Asked Questions about Project Finance
The questions below reflect what sponsors, lenders, developers, and infrastructure investors ask most often when structuring a new transaction, evaluating lender protections, or managing a distressed project.
What Is Project Finance?
Project finance is a non-recourse or limited-recourse financing structure in which debt is raised against the projected cash flows of a discrete asset held in a special purpose vehicle, rather than against the sponsors' general balance sheets. Lenders are repaid from project revenues and hold security over project assets, contracts, and accounts. It is used in energy, infrastructure, mining, and transportation sectors globally.
What Does Legal Counsel Do in a Project Finance Transaction?
Project finance counsel coordinates due diligence, negotiates project contracts and financing documents, prepares the security package, manages conditions precedent, drafts direct agreements, confirms permits and approvals, and ensures that lender protections are enforceable at and after financial close. Counsel also advises on construction-phase claims, covenant compliance, and distress situations throughout the life of the transaction.
What Documents Are Required for Financial Close?
Financial close typically requires executed project contracts, facility and intercreditor agreements, security documents, direct agreements, legal opinions, corporate approvals, permits, insurance certificates, technical reports, environmental and social approvals, and satisfaction of all conditions precedent. The conditions precedent list is negotiated between the parties and can run to dozens of items in a complex cross-border transaction.
What Is a Debt Service Coverage Ratio and Why Does It Matter?
The debt service coverage ratio (DSCR) measures the ratio of available project cash flow to scheduled debt service in a given period. Senior lenders require a minimum DSCR covenant, and breach of that covenant triggers cash trap mechanisms or an event of default depending on severity. DSCR is the primary ongoing financial metric in project finance and drives both debt sizing and the structure of the cash flow waterfall.
What Are the Equator Principles and When Do They Apply?
The Equator Principles are a voluntary environmental and social risk management framework adopted by financial institutions for project finance transactions where total project capital costs are US$10 million or more, across all industry sectors globally. Where Equator Principles Financial Institutions participate as lenders, compliance with the framework's standards can become a practical condition of financing.
When Should Sponsors Engage Project Finance Counsel?
Sponsors should engage counsel during the project development phase, before financing terms are agreed, because decisions about SPV structure, contract risk allocation, permitting strategy, and security arrangements made during development directly determine whether the project will be financeable on acceptable terms. Early engagement prevents costly renegotiations once lender due diligence begins and reduces the risk of conditions precedent that cannot be satisfied at financial close.
What Is the Difference between Recourse and Non-Recourse Project Finance?
In non-recourse project finance, lenders have no claim against sponsor assets beyond their equity contribution once the project is operational and meeting its obligations. In limited-recourse structures, sponsors provide defined support during construction, such as completion guarantees or cost overrun commitments, that narrows or terminates after the project satisfies agreed completion tests. The distinction affects how sponsors account for project debt and assess contingent liability exposure.
24 Jun, 2025

