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distributed energy guinea

Practical Guide to Distributed Energy and Mini‑grid Projects in Guinea (2026): Licensing, Interconnection and Commercial Models

By Global Law Experts
– posted 3 hours ago

Guinea’s electricity sector is entering a pivotal reform cycle, and developers evaluating distributed energy Guinea opportunities need jurisdiction‑specific legal guidance that goes beyond market overviews. The Draft Electricity Law 2026, currently being finalised with African Development Bank support through the Project Preparation Facility (PPF), expands private‑sector participation pathways for mini‑grids, rooftop solar and other distributed generation assets. At the same time, the national regulator created under Loi N° L/2017/N°0050/AN and Electricité de Guinée (EDG) continue to shape the licensing, interconnection and tariff landscape in which every project must operate.

This guide provides a step‑by‑step compliance roadmap covering licensing applications, EDG interconnection requirements, commercial model selection and risk allocation, the practical information IPPs, mini‑grid operators, DFIs and in‑country counsel require to move projects forward in 2026.

Introduction and Executive Summary

Guinea possesses significant renewable energy potential, solar irradiation averaging 4.5–5.5 kWh/m²/day across much of the country, substantial hydro resources, and growing demand in both urban centres and underserved rural areas. Despite this, the country’s electrification rate remains among the lowest in West Africa, creating a structural opportunity for distributed generation projects ranging from village‑scale mini‑grids to commercial and industrial rooftop solar installations.

The regulatory environment is evolving rapidly. The 2017 law establishing the national electricity regulator set the institutional foundation, and the Draft Electricity Law 2026, supported by the AfDB PPF and managed through EDG, is designed to modernise the sector’s legal framework, clarify licence categories, introduce cost‑reflective tariff methodologies and formalise PPA structures for private operators. Industry observers expect these changes to unlock significant private investment once the draft law is enacted and its implementing regulations published.

Whether you are a mini‑grid developer sizing a rural concession, a commercial solar installer negotiating rooftop offtake, or a DFI structuring concessional finance, this guide delivers the legal checklist you need. The three immediate actions for any developer considering distributed energy in Guinea are:

  • Conduct a regulatory screen. Identify whether your project falls under the mini‑grid licence, distributed generation notification, or full IPP generation licence regime, and confirm the current status of the Draft Electricity Law 2026.
  • Engage EDG early. Interconnection feasibility studies and technical approvals from EDG are on the critical path. Initiate contact before committing to site‑specific capex.
  • Align with DFI requirements. If your project will seek concessional finance or capex grants, build ESIA, local content and procurement compliance into your project timeline from inception.

DER Regulation Guinea: Existing Framework, the 2017 Regulator Law and Draft Electricity Law 2026

Understanding the institutional architecture is essential before filing any licence application. Guinea’s energy sector is governed by multiple statutory actors whose mandates intersect at key decision points for distributed generation projects.

Key Regulatory Actors and Mandates

The institutional framework for distributed energy in Guinea involves the following principal entities:

  • Ministère de l’Énergie, de l’Hydraulique et des Hydrocarbures. Sets national energy policy, issues strategic planning directives and exercises oversight of the sector.
  • Direction Nationale de l’Énergie (DNE). The Ministry’s technical directorate responsible for implementing energy policy, including rural electrification planning and coordination of DER programmes.
  • Electricité de Guinée (EDG). The state‑owned utility responsible for generation, transmission and distribution. EDG is the default offtaker for grid‑connected IPPs and the entity with which developers must negotiate interconnection agreements and technical approvals.
  • Autorité de Régulation du Secteur de l’Électricité (regulator). Created by Loi N° L/2017/N°0050/AN, this independent authority oversees tariff setting, licence issuance, quality of service standards and dispute resolution between sector actors. Its mandate extends to both grid‑connected and off‑grid electricity supply.

The 2017 regulator law, enacted to establish the legal basis for an independent regulatory authority, was a foundational step in Guinea’s sector reform trajectory. It formally separated the regulatory function from both the Ministry’s policy role and EDG’s operational role, a prerequisite for attracting private investment into distributed generation.

What the Draft Electricity Law 2026 Changes

The Draft Electricity Law 2026 (projet de loi‑cadre du secteur de l’énergie) represents the most comprehensive reform of Guinea’s electricity legal framework in over a decade. The AfDB, through its PPF facility, is financing the engagement of consultants to update and finalise the draft and its implementing texts. EDG’s PPF documentation outlines the scope of this work, which includes modernising licence categories, introducing provisions for distributed generation and mini‑grids, establishing cost‑reflective tariff methodologies and creating formal dispute resolution mechanisms.

Key changes relevant to distributed energy developers include:

  • Expanded private participation. The draft law clarifies that private operators can enter PPAs and regulated offtake arrangements for mini‑grid and distributed generation projects, subject to licence conditions and regulator/EDG approval.
  • New licence tiers. The likely practical effect will be the creation of distinct licence categories based on installed capacity thresholds, differentiating small‑scale DG (notification‑based), mini‑grids (simplified licence) and full‑scale IPPs (comprehensive generation licence).
  • Tariff reform. Movement toward cost‑reflective methodologies that allow operators to recover investment costs while maintaining affordability safeguards, a critical element for mini‑grid tariff viability.
  • Dispute resolution. Early indications suggest the draft will formalise arbitration and mediation pathways, reducing reliance on national court proceedings for commercial disputes between operators and EDG or the regulator.

Developers should monitor the legislative timeline closely: the draft law must pass through the Conseil National de la Transition (CNT) before enactment, and implementing regulations (décrets d’application) will follow. Until enactment, the existing framework and regulator practice continue to govern licensing and interconnection.

Mini‑Grid Licensing Guinea: Step‑by‑Step Application Checklist

Licensing is the first regulatory gate for any distributed energy project in Guinea. The process varies by project type and scale, but follows a broadly consistent staged approach. This section provides the step‑by‑step checklist that developers and their counsel should follow.

Mini‑Grid vs Distributed Generation Thresholds

The applicable licence category depends on the project’s installed capacity and intended mode of operation. Under the current framework, and as refined by the Draft Electricity Law 2026, three broad categories apply:

Entity Type Key Reporting / Licence Obligations Typical Timeline to Compliance
Private mini‑grid operator (≤1 MW) Licence application, EIA/ESIA (if above threshold), interconnection study, land access agreements, local municipality permits 4–9 months (varies by studies and EDG response)
Distributed rooftop / commercial DG Notification + interconnection permit, technical conformity certificate, meter installation and billing agreement 1–3 months for small rooftop (<100 kW); longer if export proposed
IPP / utility‑scale DER (>1 MW) Full generation licence, PPA/concession approval, EIA/ESIA, tariff approval from regulator 9–18 months (negotiations + approvals)

Developers must determine early whether their project triggers the full licence application or falls under a simplified notification regime. The capacity thresholds and environmental screening criteria are critical decision points.

Numbered Licensing Steps

The following staged process applies to mini‑grid projects. Distributed rooftop projects follow a simplified version (steps 1, 3, 5, 7 and 8):

  1. Pre‑application regulatory screen. Confirm the applicable licence category with the regulator. Identify whether the project site is within EDG’s existing distribution area (requiring interconnection) or in an unserved zone (standalone mini‑grid).
  2. Company and tax registration. Establish or register a Guinean legal entity. Obtain a Numéro d’Identification Fiscale (NIF) and register with the Centre de Formalités des Entreprises.
  3. Land access and wayleave agreements. Secure land tenure documentation, lease, concession or authorisation d’occupation, from local authorities and/or customary landowners. For linear infrastructure (distribution lines), negotiate wayleave agreements.
  4. Environmental and social studies. Determine whether the project triggers an Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) or Environmental and Social Impact Assessment (ESIA) under Guinea’s environmental code. Projects above specified capacity or land‑area thresholds require a full ESIA; smaller projects may require only an environmental notice (notice d’impact).
  5. Technical feasibility study. Prepare a bankable feasibility study covering resource assessment, load profiling, system design, grid layout (for mini‑grids), connection arrangements, O&M plan and financial projections.
  6. Licence application submission. File the licence application with the regulator, including: company registration documents, proof of financial capacity (bank guarantees, equity commitment letters, DFI term sheets), feasibility study, environmental clearance, land access documentation and draft tariff proposal.
  7. Regulator review and public consultation. The regulator evaluates the application against technical, financial and legal criteria. A public consultation phase may apply, particularly for larger mini‑grid concessions.
  8. Licence issuance and interconnection approval. Upon licence grant, the developer proceeds to negotiate and finalise the interconnection agreement with EDG (if grid‑connected) or begins construction under standalone operating conditions.

Required Supporting Documents

Every mini‑grid licensing application in Guinea should include the following documentation package:

  • Corporate documents. Certificate of incorporation, NIF, shareholder registry, board resolution authorising the project.
  • Financial evidence. Audited financial statements (or sponsor guarantee), equity commitment letter, DFI term sheet or letter of intent, bank guarantee or performance bond as required.
  • Technical studies. Resource assessment report, system design and single‑line diagrams, load forecast, O&M plan, decommissioning plan.
  • Environmental clearance. EIA/ESIA approval letter or environmental notice acknowledgement from the relevant environmental authority.
  • Land documentation. Lease agreement, concession act or customary land authorisation, wayleave agreements for linear infrastructure.
  • Draft tariff proposal. Cost‑of‑service model demonstrating proposed tariff levels and projected revenue, aligned with regulator methodology.
  • Community engagement record. Minutes of community consultations, stakeholder engagement plan and grievance mechanism.

Practical red flags for developers:

  • Filing without environmental clearance will delay the application, initiate the ESIA process at least 60 days before planned licence submission.
  • Land documentation deficiencies are the most common cause of application return. Verify customary tenure arrangements with local préfecture authorities before signing.
  • Underestimating regulator review timelines: build a 3–6 month buffer for regulator questions and any public consultation requirements.

Interconnection Requirements Guinea: Technical and Safety Standards

For any distributed energy project in Guinea that will connect to EDG’s grid, whether for power export, backup supply or net metering, interconnection approval is a critical‑path requirement. EDG controls the technical standards, protection coordination and metering specifications that developers must satisfy.

Study and Approval Process

The interconnection process typically involves the following sequential studies and approvals:

  1. Interconnection feasibility study. The developer submits a preliminary interconnection request to EDG, identifying the proposed point of interconnection (POI), installed capacity, expected generation profile and any reverse power flow. EDG assesses network capacity and identifies potential constraints.
  2. System impact study. For projects above a de minimis capacity threshold, EDG may require a detailed system impact study analysing fault level contributions, voltage regulation effects, harmonics injection and protection coordination implications.
  3. Protection coordination study. The developer must demonstrate that its protection systems (relays, circuit breakers, anti‑islanding devices) are coordinated with EDG’s network protection scheme. This study is typically prepared by the developer’s engineering consultant and reviewed by EDG’s technical team.
  4. Interconnection agreement negotiation. Upon satisfactory completion of studies, the developer and EDG negotiate the interconnection agreement, covering technical specifications, cost allocation for network upgrades (if any), commissioning protocols and ongoing operational obligations.

Rooftop Solar Regulations Guinea: Metering and Billing

Metering arrangements are a practical and contractual focal point for distributed generation interconnection. Developers should consider the following:

  • Bi‑directional metering. Projects proposing to export surplus power to the grid require bi‑directional (import/export) meters meeting EDG’s technical specifications. The cost of meter procurement, installation and calibration typically falls on the developer.
  • Prepaid vs post‑paid billing. Mini‑grid operators serving end consumers in off‑grid areas commonly use prepaid metering systems (e.g., STS‑compliant tokens). For grid‑connected DG, billing arrangements follow EDG’s standard procedures or bespoke PPA billing terms.
  • Revenue collection models. Off‑grid mini‑grids must establish independent revenue collection mechanisms, mobile money integration, local agent networks or prepaid vending platforms. DFI‑backed projects often require demonstration of commercially sustainable collection rates.

EDG Interface and Point of Interconnection Negotiation

Negotiating the POI with EDG requires early and sustained engagement. Key practical considerations include:

  • Network upgrade cost allocation. If the proposed interconnection requires EDG to upgrade transformers, switchgear or distribution lines, the cost allocation methodology must be negotiated upfront. Developers should push for transparent, auditable cost estimates and consider capping their contribution through the interconnection agreement.
  • Commissioning and testing protocols. EDG will typically require witnessed commissioning tests, including anti‑islanding verification, protection relay testing and power quality measurements. Build commissioning time into your project schedule.
  • Curtailment provisions. Negotiate clear curtailment protocols, including notification requirements, compensation mechanisms and force majeure carve‑outs, to protect revenue projections against grid instability or EDG operational decisions.

Practical red flags for interconnection:

  • EDG response times for interconnection studies can be unpredictable. Escalation pathways through the regulator should be identified before filing.
  • Ensure anti‑islanding protection meets internationally recognised standards (e.g., IEEE 1547 or IEC 62116), EDG may reject non‑compliant equipment.
  • Grid code provisions remain under development. Until formal grid codes are published, rely on EDG’s project‑specific technical requirements and secure written confirmation of accepted standards.

Commercial Models and Contracts: PPA Mini‑Grid Guinea, Concession, Lease and Community Models

Selecting the right commercial model is as important as securing the licence. The optimal structure depends on project scale, location (grid‑connected vs off‑grid), DFI involvement, revenue certainty requirements and local governance capacity. This section maps the principal models available for distributed energy in Guinea and provides contract negotiation guidance for each.

Mini‑Grid PPA Key Terms

A power purchase agreement between a private mini‑grid operator and EDG (or another public counterparty) is the cornerstone contract for grid‑connected or hybrid projects. Key terms that practitioners should negotiate include:

  • Term. Typically 15–25 years for mini‑grid PPAs, aligned with asset life and DFI repayment schedules. Include extension options and early termination triggers.
  • Pricing and indexation. Establish a base tariff denominated in Guinean Francs (GNF) or, where DFI conditionalities permit, in a hard currency equivalent. Include indexation formulas linked to CPI, exchange rate movements or fuel cost indices.
  • Take‑or‑pay and minimum offtake. Where the counterparty is EDG, negotiate take‑or‑pay obligations to protect base‑case revenue. Minimum offtake quantities should reflect realistic load projections with appropriate ramp‑up periods.
  • Change in law. Include a robust change‑in‑law clause covering adverse regulatory, tax or tariff changes that materially affect project economics. Specify whether the remedy is tariff adjustment, term extension or compensation.
  • Termination and step‑in rights. Define termination events, cure periods, compensation on termination and EDG or government step‑in rights (particularly where public service continuity is at stake).

Concession and BOT Frameworks

For larger mini‑grid concessions, particularly those covering a defined geographic area or serving a specific rural electrification zone, a concession or build‑operate‑transfer (BOT) structure may be appropriate. Under this model:

  • The government or local authority grants an exclusive right to develop, operate and maintain electricity infrastructure in a defined area for a fixed term.
  • The concessionaire assumes demand risk but benefits from exclusivity and, in some cases, viability gap funding or capital subsidies.
  • At the end of the concession term, assets typically transfer to the government or EDG. Transfer conditions, residual value calculations and asset condition requirements must be specified in the concession agreement.

Historical World Bank and PPIAF materials on EDG sector restructuring provide useful precedent on concession design in Guinea’s electricity sector.

Off‑Grid Solar Guinea: Community and Hybrid Models

For village‑scale off‑grid projects where neither a PPA with EDG nor a formal concession is practical, community and hybrid models offer alternatives:

  • Community‑owned model. The community (through a cooperative or association) owns the mini‑grid assets, with technical and management support from an external operator. This model works best where DFI grant funding covers a substantial portion of capex and the community has governance capacity to manage tariff collection.
  • ESCO / lease model. An energy service company (ESCO) retains ownership of the assets and charges consumers a service fee or lease payment. The ESCO bears technology risk and maintenance responsibility, while consumers avoid upfront capital costs.
  • Hybrid anchor‑load model. A commercial or institutional anchor tenant (mine, telecom tower, agro‑processing facility) underwrites base‑load demand through a bilateral PPA, with surplus capacity distributed to surrounding communities. This model improves bankability and revenue certainty.

Commercial Model Comparison Matrix

Model Typical Scale Revenue Certainty DFI Suitability Key Risk
PPA with EDG 500 kW – 10 MW+ High (take‑or‑pay) High EDG creditworthiness; currency risk
Concession / BOT 200 kW – 5 MW Medium (demand risk) High Demand risk; regulatory change
Community‑owned 10 – 200 kW Low–Medium High (grant‑funded) Governance capacity; tariff collection
ESCO / lease 20 – 500 kW Medium Medium Consumer payment default; technology risk
Hybrid anchor‑load 100 kW – 2 MW High (anchor PPA) High Anchor tenant concentration; community pricing

Template Clauses and Negotiation Checkpoints

Regardless of the commercial model selected, every distributed energy contract in Guinea should address the following negotiation checkpoints:

  1. Governing law and language. Specify Guinean law as governing law; ensure both French and English versions are authoritative (or specify a single controlling language).
  2. Force majeure. Define force majeure events comprehensively, including political instability, regulatory moratoriums and grid failures. Distinguish between temporary suspension and prolonged force majeure triggering termination rights.
  3. Insurance requirements. Specify minimum insurance coverage (all‑risks, third‑party liability, business interruption) and require evidence of coverage as a condition precedent to commercial operations.
  4. Local content. Where DFI or government policy requires local content commitments, specify thresholds (e.g., percentage of local employment, local procurement value) and compliance reporting mechanisms.
  5. Assignment and change of control. Include lender‑friendly assignment provisions and define what constitutes a change of control requiring counterparty consent.

Mini‑Grid Tariffs Guinea: Incentives, DFIs and Financing Considerations

Tariff viability is the linchpin of any distributed energy business case. In Guinea, tariffs for mini‑grids and distributed generation are subject to oversight by the national regulator, with EDG’s purchasing terms providing an additional reference point for grid‑connected projects.

Tariff Setting Under the Draft Law

The Draft Electricity Law 2026 signals a transition toward cost‑reflective tariff methodologies. Industry observers expect the implementing regulations to introduce a framework that allows operators to recover prudently incurred costs, including a reasonable return on equity, while maintaining affordability safeguards for low‑income consumers. Until the draft law is enacted, tariff approvals are negotiated on a project‑specific basis with the regulator.

Typical DFI Clauses and Conditionalities

Developers seeking concessional finance from multilateral or bilateral DFIs should anticipate the following standard conditionalities:

  • Environmental and social standards. Compliance with the DFI’s environmental and social framework (e.g., AfDB Integrated Safeguards System, IFC Performance Standards), typically requiring a full ESIA and ongoing monitoring.
  • Procurement standards. Competitive procurement of EPC contractors and equipment, often under the DFI’s procurement rules rather than national procedures.
  • Local content and gender. Minimum local employment and procurement targets, gender action plans and community benefit‑sharing arrangements.
  • Financial reporting and audit. Quarterly financial reporting, annual external audits and compliance certificates for the duration of the financing term.

Available financing instruments include concessional loans, capex grants (particularly for rural mini‑grids), results‑based financing tied to connections delivered and technical assistance grants for project preparation. The AfDB PPF and World Bank / ESMAP programmes are active in Guinea and represent priority outreach targets for developers.

Risk Allocation, Dispute Resolution and Procurement Checklist

Every distributed energy project in Guinea must confront a defined set of risks. Effective contract design allocates each risk to the party best positioned to manage it.

Risk Category Recommended Allocation Key Contract Clause
Political / regulatory change Government / offtaker Change in law; political force majeure; stabilisation clause
Curtailment / dispatch Shared (EDG + developer) Deemed energy payments; curtailment cap; compensation formula
Currency / FX Shared / indexed FX indexation in tariff; hard‑currency sub‑account
Offtaker credit Mitigated by guarantee Government guarantee or letter of comfort; escrow account; DFI partial risk guarantee
Construction / technology Developer / EPC contractor Liquidated damages; performance guarantees; warranty periods

For dispute resolution, best practice in Guinea’s distributed energy sector is to include a tiered clause: (1) good‑faith negotiation, (2) mediation under regulator auspices, (3) binding arbitration under ICC or UNCITRAL rules with a seat in a neutral jurisdiction, and (4) emergency relief available in Guinean national courts. Where public service continuity is implicated, include EDG step‑in rights with defined triggers and compensation mechanisms.

Conclusion: Practical Next Steps for Distributed Energy Guinea Projects

Guinea’s distributed energy landscape is being reshaped by the Draft Electricity Law 2026, growing DFI engagement and a clear market need for off‑grid and mini‑grid solutions. For developers and investors ready to act, the following three‑point checklist provides an immediate action plan:

  1. Regulatory screen and licence pathway confirmation. Determine your project’s licence category, confirm the status of the Draft Electricity Law 2026 with the regulator, and assemble your documentation package. Engage legal counsel experienced in distributed energy Guinea regulations to navigate the application process efficiently.
  2. EDG engagement and interconnection planning. Initiate contact with EDG’s technical team to request an interconnection feasibility study. Secure written confirmation of applicable technical standards and begin protection coordination and metering discussions.
  3. DFI outreach and financing alignment. Identify applicable DFI programmes (AfDB PPF, World Bank/ESMAP, bilateral facilities), align your project preparation with DFI ESIA and procurement requirements, and secure early‑stage term sheets or letters of intent to demonstrate financial capacity in your licence application.

The window for establishing first‑mover advantage in Guinea’s distributed energy market is open now. Developers who combine rigorous legal compliance with early stakeholder engagement and DFI alignment will be best positioned to capture the opportunities that the 2026 reforms are designed to create.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Aboubacar Sidiki Kanté at ASK AVOCATS, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Assemblée Nationale de Guinée, Loi N° L/2017/N°0050/AN (creation of regulator)
  2. Electricité de Guinée (EDG), PPF / project docs
  3. African Development Bank, PPF announcement for loi cadre
  4. CrossBoundary Energy, Distributed Energy Resources regulation market highlight: Guinea
  5. Africa Energy Portal, Guinea country profile
  6. PPIAF / World Bank, EDG and sector reform materials
  7. International Trade Administration, Guinea renewable resources
  8. Energydata.info, Guinea distributed renewable energy dataset

FAQs

How are mini‑grids and distributed generation licensed in Guinea?
Developers follow a staged application process: regulatory screen to confirm the applicable licence category, company and tax registration in Guinea, environmental and social study (where required by capacity or site thresholds), licence application to the regulator with technical and financial documents, and finally interconnection approval with EDG. Timelines vary from 4–9 months for small mini‑grids to 9–18 months for larger IPP‑scale projects.
At minimum, developers must complete an interconnection feasibility study, a protection coordination study, and a metering plan, all subject to review and authorisation by EDG. Projects meeting environmental thresholds also require an EIA or ESIA. Land and wayleave permits are required for any linear infrastructure connecting to EDG’s distribution network.
The Draft Electricity Law 2026 expands private participation pathways and clarifies that private operators can enter PPAs and regulated offtake arrangements, subject to licence conditions and approval by both the regulator and EDG. The AfDB PPF documentation and EDG project preparation materials confirm this direction of reform. Implementing regulations will define the detailed terms once the law is enacted.
The principal options are a community‑owned concession (suitable where DFI grant funding covers substantial capex), a sponsor‑led PPA with a public counterparty, or an energy service company (ESCO) lease model. The optimal choice depends on access to subsidy or DFI funding, revenue certainty requirements and local governance capacity. Hybrid anchor‑load models, where a commercial tenant underwrites base demand, are increasingly attractive for improving bankability.
Tariffs are subject to oversight by the national regulator established under the 2017 law. The Draft Electricity Law 2026 signals movement toward cost‑reflective, pro‑investment methodologies with consumer affordability safeguards. Until the new law is enacted, tariffs are negotiated on a project‑specific basis. Developers should verify current regulator guidance and EDG purchasing terms before finalising their tariff proposals.
EDG sets technical interconnection standards in coordination with the national regulator and the Direction Nationale de l’Énergie. Developers must obtain EDG’s technical approvals, including protection coordination, metering specifications and anti‑islanding requirements, before commissioning any grid‑connected distributed energy installation.
Best practice is a tiered dispute resolution clause: good‑faith negotiation, followed by mediation, then binding arbitration under ICC or UNCITRAL rules with a neutral seat. Emergency relief should remain available in Guinean national courts. Where public service continuity is at stake, include local step‑in rights for EDG with defined compensation mechanisms.
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Practical Guide to Distributed Energy and Mini‑grid Projects in Guinea (2026): Licensing, Interconnection and Commercial Models

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