Hydro
Tasmania has upped the ante in its dispute with Basslink Pty Ltd.
A
month ago it unilaterally stopped paying the monthly facility fee for use of
the interconnector linking Tasmania with the national electricity market. It is
using the cable, but refusing to pay.
Basslink
P/L is part of Keppel Infrastructure Trust, part-owned by the Singapore
Government and listed on the Singapore Stock exchange.
On
Monday last week, Keppel lodged financial statements for the period ending
September 30.
It
revealed the woes of its wholly owned subsidiary Basslink P/L. Basslink is a
reasonably simple operation. It owns an interconnector cable. Hydro has an
agreement for exclusive use of the cable for another 15 years. The facility fee
varies from month to month, depending on whether it is available for use, the
electricity price differences between Tasmania and the mainland, and prevailing
interest rates.
During
the outage from December 2015 to June 2016 the facility fee was zero. It
resumed again after the repair, roughly at the rate of $75 million per annum,
until a month ago when Hydro stopped paying.
Basslink
owes $700 million to its banks. The estimated amount Hydro owes Basslink is
$500 million. That is the estimated facility fee over the next 15 years in
today’s dollars.
If
Hydro doesn’t pay Basslink, then Basslink has trouble paying its banks. With no
income from Hydro during the outage it managed to keep paying the banks, but
found itself in breach of loan covenants. It found itself unable to meet the
minimum debt service coverage ratio and therefore was required to agree on a
new long-term financing plan. Basslink’s $700 million of borrowings are listed
as current liabilities, meaning they are repayable in this current year. A new
long-term financing arrangement is the only other option.
Just
as Basslink’s $700 million loan is being renegotiated with its banks, Hydro
played its card. It stopped paying the monthly fee. Hydro was not insured
against the Basslink outage. Hydro may have to prove Basslink was at fault to
recoup damages from Basslink. But Basslink’s insurers accepted the outage was a
force majeure event, an act of God, and have paid out compensation of $40
million. Hydro does not accept it was a force majeure.
The
immediate problem for Basslink is that while $11 million went to partially pay
for the cost of interconnector repairs, the balance was snookered by the banks.
It is yet to be released. The banks are hanging on to it, pending finalisation
of the new long-term financing plan.
Hydro
just made Basslink’s cash situation even worse.
Everyone
has a different agenda. The banks would like to see their exposure lowered, I
guess. Hydro would like some compensation, no doubt. I’m sure it would accept a
lower fee. It is a classic standoff. Either Basslink’s parent has to put in
more, or Hydro has to resume paying, or both, else Basslink is insolvent.
Basslink is an Australian registered company, so Australian insolvency laws
apply.
The
worst-case scenario for an insolvent company is liquidation. This is possible,
but unlikely. Basslink’s banks will not want to take control of the
interconnector in an attempt to recover its loans.
Yet
Keppel, Basslink’s parent, will not want to tip in too much unless it can be
assured the interconnector asset is worth it. What the interconnector asset is
worth, however, depends almost entirely on the revenue it receives from Hydro.
It is difficult to envisage a situation where someone other than Hydro operates
the cable.
Has
Hydro made a strategic play? A risky one perhaps?
Whether
Hydro manages to negotiate a lower fee with Basslink might not have any effect
on the $350 million it owes Macquarie Bank in respect of a poorly judged side
deal to protect itself from interest rate rises impacting on the facility fee.
Macquarie agreed to pay Hydro any extra fee that resulted from a rise in
interest rates. In return Hydro agreed to pay Macquarie the fee saving
resulting from a fall in interest rates. Interest rates started falling the
minute Hydro agreed to the side deal. It pays Macquarie Bank about $30 million
a year. Hydro will not reveal the actual figure. It is commercial in
confidence.
Basslink
was insured against physical loss and also business interruption. Unlike Hydro.
At the parliamentary inquiry on August 4, seven weeks after the interconnector
resumed, Hydro chief executive Steve Davy, in response to a question as to
whether Hydro will insure against future outages, said: “We have not, as a
corporation, considered or entered into discussions with other parties about
covering that possibility.”
There
you have it.
Imagine
almost writing off the family car and then saying, “gosh I didn’t expect
repairs to take so long and be so costly and I didn’t anticipate paying for
hire cars for six months. How was I to know it was going to cost $180 million?
It was a one-in-2600-years event, but will I insure the car now that it’s back
on the road? I haven’t considered that.”
Imagine
saying that?
The
Basslink deal is an example of a public private infrastructure arrangement. Essentially
the interconnector forms part of Hydro’s generating assets. The traditional way
was to fund these was with debt. The annual finance charges of $100 million
paid by Hydro to Basslink and Macquarie Bank are de facto finance charges and were these
added to interest payable on Hydro’s other
borrowings of $900 million , the total would place Hydro close to a breach of
its own loan covenants.
One
thing for sure is there’s plenty of water yet to flow under the bridge.