http://ieefa.org/ieefa-australia-escalating-financial-risk-adanis-abbot-point-coal-terminal/

IEEFA Australia: Escalating Financial Risk in Adani’s Abbot Point Coal
Terminal
Begging the Question as to Why the Government Would Lend Heavily to a
Tax-Haven Scheme Controlled by a Foreign Billionaire

Oct. 2, 2017 (IEEFA) — New analysis by The Institute for Energy Economics
and Financial Analysis (IEEFA) finds that Adani’s Abbot Point Coal Terminal
is excessively leveraged, promises negative shareholders equity, and runs
the risk of becoming a stranded asset if Adani’s proposed Carmichael mine
does not get the A$1 billion Australian taxpayer subsidy it seeks.

The analysis, described in a report published today—“An Australian House of
Cards: The Escalating Financial Risk in Adani’s Abbot Point Coal
Terminal”—finds more broadly that Adani’s entire A$3.5 billion debt-funded
“investment” in Australia is at grave risk.

The terminal is due for a $1.5bn debt refinancing next year and a
cumulative debt refinancing of $2.11bn by 2020. Currently operating at just
over 50% capacity, AAPCT needs the Carmichael mine to fill the gap created
as its current take-or-pay contracts progressively expire.

“Securing this refinancing is going to be a real challenge, not the least
because the port value has been tied to the success of the Carmichael coal
mine proposal which is itself yet to secure funding and which the “Big
Four” Australian banks have refused to touch,” said Tim Buckley, lead
author of the report and IEEFA’s director of energy finance studies,
Australasia.

“The potential for a loss of up to A$1.5bn on any decision to walk away
from Carmichael mine and rail proposal, explains why the Adani Group has
been so focused on securing Australian taxpayer money and royalty holidays
to subsidise its loss-making ventures.”

“To the extent that can be gleaned from ASIC records, Adani’s entire mine,
rail and port operation in Australia looks to be 100% debt financed and
shareholders funds now tally an unprecedented, negative $458m combined. The
value at stake for the Adani Group’s Carmichael mine proposal is far bigger
than previously understood.”

Whilst Adani continues to search for overseas project funding, events have
transpired that make the Carmichael project a greater financial risk than
ever:

Adani’s major proposed offtake coal customer, Adani Power Ltd’s 4.6GW
import-coal power plant at Mundra in Gujarat, is financially distressed and
its equity is for sale for just Rs1 (no buyers yet);
India’s thermal coal imports have continued the downward trend of the last
two years and are down 13% year-to-date in 2017 compared to the prior year;
In light of new solar infrastructure projects delivering electricity at
prices now 20% below many Indian thermal power plant tariffs, analysts see
no import-coal demand recovery.
The A$2 billion AAPCT appears to have paid net zero tax over the past five
years, a clear precedent that begs the question as to why the Australian
government would lend $1 billion to a tax-haven business controlled by a
foreign billionaire, why a royalty holiday is justified, and why water for
such a project should be allocated away from Australian farmers.

Full report: “House of Cards: The Escalating Financial Risk of Adani’s
Abbot Point Coal Terminal” (<
http://ieefa.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/10/Escalating-Financial-Risk-of-Adanis-Abbot-Point-Coal-Terminal.pdf
>)

Contacts:

Tim Buckley (Australia) P: +61 408 102 127 E: [email protected]

Australian/India media: Brami Jegan P +61 448 276 945 E:
[email protected]

U.S. media: Karl Cates P +1 (917) 439-8225 E: [email protected]

ABOUT IEEFA

IEEFA conducts research and analyses on financial and economic issues
related to energy and the environment.

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