Sunday 10 December 2023

Tasmania's forests: The current position

 

CHALLENGES FOR TASMANIAN PUBLIC FOREST MANAGEMENT: THE CURRENT POSITION

This paper was written for the Forest Economics Conference held at Mona from 28th to 30th November 2023.

 

CONTENTS

Background

Tasmania’s forests: A snapshot

Sustainable Timber Tasmania (STT): An overview

Issues

Tragedy of the commons

STT: A business, a guardian, or a godfather

STT in transition

Current markets

Information asymmetry

Summary

Forestry facts

Less popular forestry facts

Challenges

 

Friday 24 November 2023

Vic Forests: The aftermath

 

Vic Forests’ disaster brings to mind the familiar Hemingway quote: “How did you go bankrupt?"

“Two ways. Gradually, then suddenly.”

The 2021/22 bottom line of $54 million was followed by a $61 million loss in 2022/23, according to Vic Forests’ recently tabled Annual Report.

However a close reading of the financials reveals the picture was far worse.

Sunday 5 November 2023

STT admits accounting errors

 

This note is an addendum to the blog STT's forest valuation charade following the release of STT’s Annual Report for 2022/23 on 31st October 2023.

STT has admitted making errors with its financial statement since 2010. It has restated prior year financials and provided an extensive note.

Monday 9 October 2023

Macquarie Point Stadium: Gold Mine or Fools Gold?

(Co-written with Graeme Wells, Adjunct Senior Researcher at the University of Tasmania).

The public discussion re the proposed AFL stadium at Macquarie Point has become a bit of a shouting match where the pro and cons of an AFL side and the manoeuvrings of politicians and AFL managers have taken centre stage.

In our view it is important we don’t lose sight of the fundamentals which must underpin sensible public policy. It is for this reason we have chosen to comment on a recent study given prominence in the media which essentially ridiculed expert reports about the economic case for the stadium.

Mr Hanson’s recent contribution to the economic case for the proposed AFL stadium has received extensive coverage in the Mercury. It has been described as uncovering a gold mine for Tasmania. He claims to identify deficiencies in the expert analysis provided to the government. Unfortunately, his creative adjustments to the government business case, which included a benefit cost analysis (BCA), are misleading and based on a misunderstanding of BCAs. This article is intended to correct the record.

Monday 21 August 2023

STT's forest valuation charade

 

Publicly owned commercial native forests as operated by Sustainable Timber Tasmania P/L (STT) are perpetual assets managed for the benefit of future generations.

Yet when STT values its forests every year it values the estate as a single rotation crop. Which is a patently absurd assumption for a perpetual asset where replanting is mandatory.

This is the loophole that allows STT to pretend to be sustainable. Replanting costs are excluded when determining the expected net proceeds which forms the basis for a forest’s value.

Saturday 19 August 2023

Hydro & Aurora Energy: Onerous contracts

 

Power Purchase Agreements have been used to assist developers of renewable energy projects. These notes explain how Hydro Tasmania and Aurora Energy account for these agreements and how accounting standards allow much of the relevant detail to escape the reporting net.

Included also is a closer look at how Hydro’s sale of a majority share in its windfarms was only possible due to a generous Power Purchase Agreement by Hydro effectively guaranteeing to pay the purchaser’s debt over the term of the agreement.

Finally there’s a note outlining how the assumption of sunk costs are used by renewable energy promoters to give a rosy view of individual projects. For instance, a windfarm developer needn’t consider the costs of Marinus because it’s a sunk cost however large.  A recent article is cited describing how sunk cost trickery understates the costs of renewable energy projects.

Friday 4 August 2023

STT revisited

 Most people hoped we’d heard and seen the last of them.

But then a bell rang, and out they came, like the travelling troupers from Harry Paulsen’s Touring Stadium.

The forest fighters were back, determined as always to ignore recent events if it didn’t suit their narrative.

The spark that re- ignited the fire was the decision of the Victorian government to halt native forest logging. It was described as a Dan Andrews stuff up, as the actions of an anti-forestry government, but that shows a wilful ignorance of the financial unsustainability of native forest harvesting in general and VicForests in particular, where the final nail in its coffin were the massive 2020 bushfires.

Monday 24 July 2023

Borrowings: La Trobe Uni and the lessons for UTAS

 

La Trobe University (LU) today announced its intention to raise funds via a Green Bond issue following in the footsteps of UTAS Green Bond raising of $350 million in the 2022 year.

The amount to be raised is not known at this stage and is irrelevant for the purpose of this note which is to have a quick look at the requirements/restrictions for LU to raise money in this manner and provide the current Leg Co Committee looking into UTAS with information which may assist their deliberations.

What lessons are there for UTAS?

Thursday 20 July 2023

UTAS: In more trouble than Burke and Wills?

 

UTAS is in more trouble than Burke and Wills.

The UTAS Council meeting on 27th April 2023 discussed the 2023 financial forecast. The minutes, reproduced below, make bleak reading.

The Council “discussed the challenging conditions facing the University in 2023” and proceeded to discuss ways “to generate a positive EBITDA in the coming years.” What that implies is that current projections must show negative EBITDAs.

The acronym EBITDA stands for Earnings Before Interest Tax Depreciation and Amortisation, essentially the cash earnings before interest and depreciation (NB UTAS doesn’t pay tax). It’s a standard measure of the cash available to service borrowings and to pay for capex amounts (new buildings say).

UTAS’ EBITDA in 2022 was $30.9 million. To be in negative territory in 2023 reveals an alarming downturn.

A business might break even from a profit perspective, but adding back depreciation and interest gives a figure for cash earnings.

If UTAS has negative cash earnings, it can only survive by running down its investments or borrowing more. Even if capex spending is zero, it means UTAS is borrowing to pay interest. Ouch.

Running down investment and borrowing more was the plan for financing the Hobart move. Without that UTAS survival changes would be greater as universities traditionally have a larger buffer of cash and investments than most in the private sector.

The minutes suggest future challenges will start to be addressed in October. This highlights the nature of UTAS’ business. Whilst others might be able to implement changes more rapidly, UTAS is tied to the cycle of the academic year. It’s going to have to live with cash haemorrhaging for the rest of 2023 and hope things can be put into place post October to take effect before the 2024 academic year.

The 2022 Annual Report reflected “(t)hese past three years have been among the most challenging our University has ever faced.”

It’s going to get worse. Far worse.

Wednesday 19 July 2023

UTAS: The State government's role Part 2

 

(Apart from the three introductory paragraphs, this blog was sent as a supplementary sumission to the Legislative Council’s Inquiry into Provisions of the University of Tasmania Act 1992.)

Maybe it was a coincidence or maybe it was intended. UTAS dumped a huge cache of documents and minutes on its website which related to its intended move into the Hobart CDB just days after the Legislative Council inquiry met with Treasurer Michael Ferguson on the 6th July 2023, thereby resticting the sorts of question he would otherwise have faced, essentially about  the role of the State government in UTAS’ affairs.

The data dump can be found HERE.

Pursuant to sec 7(2) of the UTAS Act the Treasurer needs to give UTAS approval before it undertakes any borrowings.

The previous blog on this site explored some of the issues around UTAS’ borrowings following the Treasurer’s brief appearance, what it means for the State governemnt and we as Tasmanians, and what the Treasurer knew/didn’t know/should have known/ignored about UTAS.

This blog attempts to fill in some of the missing pieces of the puzzle gleaned from the new information in the public domain.

Monday 17 July 2023

UTAS: The State government's role

 

The following are comments which formed part of a supplementary submission to the Legislative Council Inquiry into the Provisions of the University of Tasmania Act 1992 following Treasurer Michael Ferguson’s appearance before the Committee on 6th July 2023

The Treasurer’s brief appearance highlighted some of the relevant issues relating to the State Government’s role. The issues canvassed here include:

·        Ownership and/or control of UTAS’s assets

·        The reason for Sec 7(2), the need for UTAS to obtain the Treasurer’s approval before borrowing.

·        Borrowing like arrangements: service concession deals.

·        Borrowing like arrangements: other.

·        The University of Wollongong (UOW) experience: A cautionary tale.

The notes were prepared to assist the Committee understand the financial issues facing UTAS. They were prepared before the massive data dump by UTAS of documents, Council minutes etc relating to UTAS proposed relocation to Hobart CDB which occurred after the Treasurer’s Committee hearing, which conveniently meant the Committee was unable to chase up some interesting leads about funding the CDB move and what it may mean for UTAS, the state government and for all Tasmanians. An up coming blog will cover the more interesting revelations.

Saturday 8 July 2023

UTAS : The road ahead

 

The financial overview in UTAS’s recently released annual report for the calendar year 2022, although much more extensive than in past years, did little to explain UTAS’s current financial position.

Detailing what went up and what went down is a mind-numbing exercise, which does little to explain the financial challenges or “how we will approach the years ahead as we enter ever more variations of the new normal”, as UTAS noted in its report.

At a guess that’s “PR speak’’ for “We’re not sure where we’re going, but we’ll give it a go.”

Blessed with gifted land, funded by capital grants for buildings and endowed with bequests and other amounts for education and research purposes, UTAS has gradually built its net assets position.

Apart from capital grants and investment income, UTAS makes losses every year, losses from the core activities of teaching and research, and losses caused by a relentless pattern of what is described as restructuring costs. We aren’t told what these are, whether they’re consultants’ fees, or whether they relate to the Hobart relocation. All we know is, at $55m over the past eight years, they’re much greater than the deficits from teaching and research.

Wednesday 28 June 2023

UTAS' 2022 Financials: Is UTAS still on track?

 (This is a note prepared for the Legislative Council's Inquiry into the Provisions of the University of Tasmania Act 1992)

Introduction

The recent tabling of UTAS’ 2022 Annual Report is an opportune time to have a close look at UTAS’ current situation.

Rather than just a snapshot of one year’s financials, a few past years will provide a better basis to form a view of how UTAS has arrived at where it is now, and what this means for the future.

The following note is based on UTAS’ financial statements since 2015. It is not a management accounting exercise looking at costs, revenues and student numbers etc, for that is outside the Committee’s Terms of Reference, rather an explanation of UTAS’ overall financial situation.

Executive summary

UTAS’ net profits are very volatile.

Stripping away capital grants and investment income however leaves a more sedate picture.

Unfortunately, all that’s left are losses, losses from the core activities of teaching and research, and losses caused by a relentless pattern of what UTAS describes as restructuring costs.  

It’s not so much that UTAS’s buildings may no longer be suitable, but its current financial model is not fit for purpose.

The gobsmacking reality which UTAS has kept hidden, is that deficits from core activities have been funded by investment income, which inevitably will fall as investments are redeemed to fund the Hobart CDB move.

If as UTAS has suggested, the prize at the end of the day is only $200 million once the Sandy Bay assets are monetised (as consultants term it) and the development costs in the Hobart CDB paid for, how will deficits from UTAS’ core activities be funded?

Tuesday 9 May 2023

UTAS borrowings

 

This is an additional submission to the Legislative Council’s Inquiry into the Provisions of the University of Tasmania Act 1992 supplementing submission # 93, evidence given on 12th December 2022 and a further submission made 19th December 2022.

The supplementary submission was prompted by the lack of transparency and scrutiny surrounding UTAS’ borrowing arrangements as it pushes on with its move into the centre of Hobart.

The discussion is widened to include the raising of funds other than by traditional borrowings and whether Sec 7(2) of UTAS’ governing Act which requires the Treasurer’s approval to borrow, needs to be broadened to include other borrowing-like arrangements.

This is followed by comments on other arrangements that impact of UTAS’ financial position.

UTAS: The need to redefine who are members

 

This was an additional submission made on 19th December 2022 to the Legislative Council’s Inquiry into the Provisions of the University of Tasmania Act 1992, supplementing submission #93 and evidence given on 12th December 2022, all of which are available on the committee’s website.

The supplementary submission was prompted by the lack of a coherent discussion as to who are UTAS’ members, to whom should UTAS report and what role should members have in selecting board members (the University Council).

The need for the exact legal status of UTAS to be clarified was highlighted by Premier Rockcliff’s October 2022 assertion that UTAS was a private company and Vice Chancellor Black’s recent contention at the May 4th 2023 hearing that UTAS is an instrumentality of the State.

Hopefully the Committee will be able to address this crucial issue. Most people are unaware if they're members of UTAS. Being a member does bestow any particular rights or obligations to receive information and very little by way a right to determine who should be elected to Council.

VicForests: The ongoing disaster

 

The 2021/22 VicForests’ loss of $54 million was a disaster. In one fell swoop VicForests’ equity of $45 million funded by the gift of trees from the Crown, was totally wiped out.

To end up with a loss of $54 million after timber sales of $80 million is a staggering achievement. 955,000 cubic metres of timber were sold at an average price of $85 per m3. The cash loss was a mind boggling $58 per m3.

The stumpage value of harvested timber (sales less harvesting and haulage costs) slumped to less than 4 per cent of revenue or $3.1 million. The stumpage value was $3 per m3. On a per hectare basis this is less than the costs to regenerate. Regeneration costs were $3.2 million. A government lifeline was needed to pay employee costs ($20.3 million), roading costs ($6.4 million) and overheads of $21.6 million. 

Harvesting 80-year-old trees for a stumpage value of $3 per m3 is the height of absurdity especially when it is accompanied by all the unrecorded non-timber losses.

Plantations grow at least four to five faster than native forests. This makes clear-felling native forests to essentially create the same woodchip product as plantations little more than State sponsored vandalism.

VicForests’ equity at June 2022 was negative $3 million. But for a letter of comfort from the Treasurer, VicForests would have been forced to cease trading.

The VicForests' model: A brief explainer

 

VicForests’ major assets are the trees that have been transferred from the Crown and are available to be harvested until 2030, the current end date for logging native forests in Victoria. There are a few plantations on its books, but these are of little significance.

The underlying forest land does not appear in VicForests’ books, only the trees.

When the trees were transferred to VicForests they were recorded as having a value equal to estimated future net harvest proceeds. The contribution/gift by the Crown represented the Crown’s equity in VicForests.

In theory, in a perfect world, when trees are harvested and sold, the net proceeds will be the same as the value on VicForests’ books. The book value of the asset will be realised. The book value of the trees will become an offsetting expense. Hence net profits from harvesting and sale will be zero.  VicForests will therefore be left with cash equal to the net proceeds, some of which will be used to regenerate felled forests, with the balance to be paid to the government as a return on its investment in VicForests. Regenerated forests once established are then transferred back to the Crown. That was the plan.

Sunday 29 January 2023

Pokies in transition

 

Licenses to allow pubs and clubs to own and operate electronic gaming machines (EGMs) passed through Parliament in October/November of 2021 after the Labor party abandoned its brief flirtation with a principles based policy approach.

It was a watershed moment for the gambling industry. Years of funding and lobbying the government were finally about to yield a jumbo jackpot with net profits from EGMs estimated to rise by an average of 50 per cent for EGM pubs.

Federal Hotels lost its monopoly ownership of EGMs but was compensated by the slashing of taxes on EGMs at its two casinos and the knowledge that its twelve Vantage pubs with EGMs were about to be become even more lucrative. Federal was also considered as the front runner in the process to select a Licensed Monitoring Operator (LMO) to replace its own Network Gaming which has been running the monopoly network.

However subsequent events have put a dampener on the industry’s euphoria. Federal failed to win the LMO tender. Maxgaming a wholly owned subsidiary of the listed gambling behemoth Tabcorp was awarded the job in August 2022.

 Shortly thereafter the government announced the introduction of mandatory pre commitment cards as a way to limit player losses as part of a revised harm reduction strategy.

The outrage from pub owners was predictable. For years they have been telling us that problem gamblers were only 0.4 per cent of the population and the bleeding hearts in the welfare lobby just wanted to rob the overwhelming majority of a bit of harmless fun.

Private mutterings are now telling a different tale. Without obsessives playing the machines, bottom lines will be severely impacted. Federal Hotels in its 2022 Annual Report issued late October 2022 confessed it was unable to assess the impact “at this point in time”.

This is a far cry from a year earlier when Federal Hotels was able to independently value eleven of its twelve Vantage pubs as part of a sale and leaseback arrangement with various associated parties. This was disclosed in it 2022 Annual Report.