Townsville Bulletin

COURT DATA ON QN DEBT

- VANESSA MARSH

A QUEENSLAND Nickel employee was owed a staggering $ 890,000 and rail giant Aurizon $ 88 million when the company collapsed two years ago, new court documents reveal.

An analysis of unpaid liabilitie­s by liquidator­s claims Clive Palmer’s Yabulu refinery owed more than $ 215 million to hundreds of creditors when it collapsed including more than $ 74 million to almost 800 employees.

While the Federal Government intervened and paid $ 64 million of the $ 74 million in owed entitlemen­ts to staff under the Fair Entitlemen­t’ Guarantee ( FEG), other corporate creditors are still chasing more than $ 141 million in outstandin­g payments.

Aurizon has been named as the biggest creditor in the com- pany’s collapse with more than $ 88 million in unpaid contracts for haulage services.

More than 150 businesses are named as third party creditors in the court documents for a range of unpaid services from transport to fuel and even marketing and uniforms.

Liquidator­s say GE Capital is owed $ 25.8 million for an aircraft lease and Australian Eastern Railroad is owed more than $ 4.6 million in unpaid haulage fees.

There is also more than $ 2.4 million owed to the Australian Taxation Office for unpaid GST, fuel excise duty fees and other taxes while more than $ 1.4 million in outstandin­g payroll tax is owed to the Office of State Revenue.

One employee who had worked at the refinery since 1988 was owed more than $ 893,000 in annual leave, re- dundancy payments and long service leave and a large portion of staff were owed payments in the hundreds of thousands.

About $ 10 million in staff entitlemen­ts is still outstandin­g despite the government interventi­on.

Former Queensland Nickel chief financial officer Darren Wolfe has filed an affidavit with the court saying he has analysed creditors’ claims and believes a number of invoices have been paid making the total amount owed to third party creditors $ 134.9 million rather than $ 141 million as claimed in the lawsuit.

The documents were filed as part of a Supreme Court legal bid by taxpayer- funded liquidator­s who are trying to claw back money owed to creditors and the Federal Government.

 ??  ?? DEBT: Court documents reveal the amount owed by Clive Palmer’s collapsed Queensland Nickel.
DEBT: Court documents reveal the amount owed by Clive Palmer’s collapsed Queensland Nickel.

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