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MPC Energy Solutions (MPCES) this morning announced that its 66.1 MWp San Patricio solar plant in Guatemala has secured its final permit and entered the testing and commissioning phase. Testing is expected to take around two weeks, with the Commercial Operation Date (COD) certificate anticipated during July. Management has consequently moved its start-of-operations guidance from Q2 2026 into Q3 2026.
The headline positive is that the single binding constraint behind the project's near year-long delay has now been removed. At the Q1 2026 results presentation on 6 May, interim CEO and CFO Stefan Meichsner was explicit that everything hinged on one outstanding grid-authority permit, with two third-party expert reports already filed and approval expected "in the coming weeks." That permit is now in hand. Since COD is the contractual trigger for closing the sale of San Patricio and the El Salvador asset (the 87.4 MWp "Project Merlin", signed 7 November 2025), today's news is a meaningful de-risking of the company's entire catalyst chain toward shareholder distributions.
The less welcome part is the renewed timeline slippage and the need for additional funding. At Q1, management still guided to a Q2 closing and had injected USD 1.0m to bridge the project to COD, while flagging that any drift into July or August could require further funding at roughly USD 150k per month. That scenario has now materialised: MPCES is making a further USD 1.5m capital contribution to cover debt service, on-site staffing and operating costs through to COD. Importantly, the company expects nearly all of this to be recovered via contractually agreed closing adjustments to the purchase price, and states that transaction economics remain in line with prior guidance. In other words, this is a cash-timing drag against the roughly USD 7.5m free-cash position reported at end-Q1, not a hit to the Merlin sale value. The ability to sell spot power during the testing window is a small further offset.
Net-net, the equity story is intact but shifted roughly one quarter to the right. The sequence of COD in July, followed by Merlin closing, proceeds collected and the first capital repayment, now sits in Q3, consistent with the timing management already signalled at the 27 May AGM, where resolutions 5 and 6 enabling a step-wise capital return of up to EUR 1.70 per share were passed unanimously. With the permitting risk that has dogged this asset for a year finally behind it, execution on closing and the first distribution becomes the decisive proof point for investors.
Disclaimer: HC Andersen Capital receives payment from MPC Energy Solutions for a Corporate Visibility subscription agreement. /Michael Friis, 15 June 2026. 11:42
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