On December 27, 2023, Argentine President Javier Milei sent to the Congress an omnibus reform proposing far-reaching changes with respect to the matters described below.

  • Creation of an Incentive Regime for Large Investments: The bill creates the so-called “Incentive Regime for Large Investments”, through which the holders and/or operators of large investments in new projects or expansions of existing ones of certain sectors (including agribusiness, infrastructure, forestry, mining, oil and gas, energy, and technology) that adhere to such regime will be entitled to tax grants, customs and FX benefits, among others, and long-term stability in such matters.
  • Introduction of changes in Public Works Concession regulation: Relevant amendments to the public works concession regime of Law No. 17,520 are contemplated, providing broad provisions with respect to the incorporation of sole purpose investment vehicles (SPVs), financing parties protection, arbitration resolution mechanisms, covenants of the State, and the possibility of presenting infrastructure projects by initiative of the private sector.
  • Amendments to the Electric Energy Regulatory Framework: The National Executive Power is empowered until December 31, 2025 to reform the electricity regulatory framework (Laws No. 15,336 and 24,065). Such changes shall conform the following guidelines: the right to freely negotiate export/imports electricity agreements; promote competition and the expansion of electricity markets; ensure that electricity transactions are based on economic rules; provide for transparency on price and rate calculation mechanisms; and foster the expansion of the transmission infrastructure.
  • Energy transition and reduction of GHG emissions : Within the framework of compliance with the Greenhouse Gas (“GHG“) emissions targets committed by Argentine under the Paris Treaty, the National Executive Power is empowered with the right to assign GHG emission rights to each economic sector, set annual limits compatible with international commitments, monitor and penalize non-compliance with emission targets, and establish an emission rights market for the trading of surpluses of those who comply with their targets. The National State will provide private companies, the public sector and other organizations with the appropriate conditions and instruments to achieve these goals and access climate financing facilities.

 

For additional information, please contact Nicolás Eliaschev, Javier Constanzó, Daiana Perrone, Milagros Piñeiro, Pablo Arrascaeta, Florencia Martínez Trobbiani, Rocío Valdez and/or Victoria Barrueco.