EnergyAustralia flags further write downs, in ‘challenging’ market

EnergyAustralia’s Hong-Kong listed parent company, CLP Group, has flagged further write downs of its Australian generation assets, citing ongoing “challenging conditions” in a market where demand for electricity has fallen for six consecutive years.

In what CLP CEO Richard Lancaster described as a “clear” and “to be expected” supply-side market reaction, EnergyAustralia would continue to take steps to respond to energy market overcapacity, falling demand and suppressed wholesale prices.

“Should oversupply in the wholesale market continue unabated, the value of generation assets may be at risk,” Lancaster said.

EnergyAustralia Yallourn projectThis time last year, EnergyAustralia slashed the value of brown coal generator Yallourn by about $300 million, as well as some of its gas-fired generation assets, after slumping to a loss of $350 million for calendar 2013.

And last year, the company also announced plans to permanently close and decommission its Wallerawang Power Station in NSW – in response to ongoing weak wholesale prices and the lack of availability of competitively priced coal supply.

“We also negotiated the early termination of an onerous contract inherited from Ausgrid in NSW and reduced costs in a number of areas, including centralising those functions best managed at the corporate level,” Lancaster said in his CEO’s report, accompanying CLP’s annual results on Friday.

CLP said that while EnergyAustralia’s operating earnings increased in 2014 – from $HK126 million in 2013 to $HK756 million – revenue from electricity generation in Australia had fallen 21.7 per cent over the year due to an unprecedented decline in demand, overcapacity in generation and falling wholesale prices.

The company said the decline in demand was driven by energy efficiency, rooftop solar, and industrial closures; as well as uncertainty and increased market risks caused by regulatory changes – at a time when stiff market competition was putting additional pressure on retail margins.

Interestingly, Lancaster also noted that the Abbott government’s successful repeal of the Clean Energy Future legislation and all related liabilities, including the carbon tax, in July 2014, had led to a reduction of earnings in the second half of 2014, with EnergyAustralia no longer receiving “transitional support” for its Yallourn brown coal power generator in Victoria’s La Trobe Valley.

“These factors have combined to erode the value of our business in Australia over the past few years,”  said CLP vice chairman Betty Yuen So Siu-mai – and both she and Lancaster stressed that these challenging market conditions were expected to continue.

“Our strategy will focus on reducing costs, improving operational performance, managing exposure to generation, realigning the business to the new market paradigm and streamlining retail processes,” said Lancaster.

“Our focus will be on realigning the business with the new market and political paradigms to restore value for our shareholders in the years to come.”

Meanwhile, GDF Suez, the French owner of Victorian coal-fired power station Hazelwood, has reported a return to profit in 2014, but warned that low oil and gas prices will weigh on profitability and cause them to delay billions of Euros of planned investment.

The return to net profit of €2.4 billion comes after the company reported deep losses in 2013 on write downs on European power plants.

To limit any further impact on its bottom line, GDF Suez said it would reduce operating expenditure by around €250 million in 2015 and delay around €2 billion in investment in 2015 and 2016.

Comments

3 responses to “EnergyAustralia flags further write downs, in ‘challenging’ market”

  1. Raahul Kumar Avatar
    Raahul Kumar

    In regards to one point made in the article

    “demand for electricity has fallen for six consecutive years.”

    Australia is shockingly bad in per capita energy use. Compare us to Nihon, for example.

    https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/f/f4/Energy-consumption-per-capita-2003.png

    http://inhabitat.com/infographic-which-countries-are-the-most-energy-efficient/

    So much more can be done, and we should see many more write downs. In fact, I don’t see the need for any new power generation at all if energy efficiency is seriously embraced.

    https://beyondzeroemissions.org/buildings

    http://bze.org.au/media/newswire/abc-envrionment-government-doesnt-care-about-your-next-house-110623

    1. Evan A Avatar
      Evan A

      Japan is ahead for many reasons. The auto making giant is a bicycle riding nation, the 70s oil shocks triggered a sustained attempt at efficiency, k size vehicles hold the lion’s share of the market (considered too small to even sell here), the ‘gaman’ culture where they put up with extreme seasons without mechanical heating/cooling, the ‘fastest runner’ policy for electrical goods, they build small well-Insulated houses, they often stay at home till marriage (less households), public transport is excellent, dishwashers and clothes dryers are rightly seen as unnecessary space and energy guzzlers and on and on. Despite all that, there’s still heaps of scope for radical improvements in efficiency there. As for oz, with our exuberant waste, it’ll actually be very easy to lift our game.

      1. Raahul Kumar Avatar
        Raahul Kumar

        That’s exactly what I’m suggesting. Rather than build more generators of any type, it would be much more efficient to incentivize energy efficiency.

        A higher tax on fuel, plus cars, plus parking and other such incentives are needed. Electricity is too cheap. Higher cost is what is needed to make Australians embrace a lifestyle change.

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