Montreal Gazette

Hydro-québec puts global ambitions on hold as demand drops

Utility reports 14-per-cent dip in first-quarter profit

- FRÉDÉRIC TOMESCO ftomesco@postmedia.com

COVID-19 is forcing Hydro-québec to pull the plug on its global ambitions — for now.

Quebec’s state-owned power generator and distributo­r has put internatio­nal mergers and acquisitio­ns on hold for the foreseeabl­e future because of the COVID-19 crisis, chief financial officer Jean-hugues Lafleur said Friday.

Former chief executive Éric Martel, who left last month, had made foreign expansion a key tenet of his growth strategy.

“We’re in revision mode” as pertains to acquisitio­ns, Lafleur told reporters on a conference call. “I don’t see how Hydro-québec could take $5 billion now and invest it in Chile because we have an investment opportunit­y there. Instead, the $5 billion will be invested here to support the Quebec economy. We’re going to make sure the Quebec economy recovers the right way before we go abroad.”

Lafleur spoke after Hydro- Québec reported a 14-per-cent drop in first-quarter profit and warned full-year results will fall short of expectatio­ns as COVID -19 weighs on power demand.

Net income in the three-month period ended March 31 was $1.53 billion, down from $1.77 billion a year ago, Hydro-québec said in a statement. Revenue fell about six per cent to $4.37 billion.

“Due to the economic downturn resulting from the current crisis, we’re anticipati­ng lower electricit­y sales in all of our markets,” Lafleur said.

“Consequent­ly, the financial outlook for 2020 set out in the strategic plan 2020–2024 will be revised downward.”

It’s still too early to determine the scope of the revision, the company said in its quarterly report. Hydro-québec was targeting net income of between $2.8 billion and $3 billion in 2020, according to its strategic plan.

The first quarter was the utility’s last under Martel, who quit to take over at jet maker Bombardier Inc. Quebec appointed former Énergir CEO Sophie Brochu to replace him, effective April 6.

First-quarter results “weren’t significan­tly affected” by the pandemic, Lafleur said on a conference call with reporters.

Electricit­y sales generated $294 million less than a year ago due primarily to milder temperatur­es, he said.

Results will start to reflect COVID-19’S impact in the second quarter. Electricit­y consumptio­n in Quebec has fallen five per cent in the past two months, paced by an 11-per-cent plunge for commercial and institutio­nal clients.

Industrial customers such as pulp and paper producers have also curbed power use, and it’s hard to see demand rebounding this year, Lafleur said.

“What we’ve lost since the start of the pandemic is not coming back,” he said.

Demand on export markets, meanwhile, has shrunk between six per cent and nine per cent since mid-march.

The drop has been particular­ly steep in Ontario, reaching as much as 12 per cent, compared with declines of up to five per cent in New England and eight per cent in New York.

Spot prices in the U.S. have retreated in tandem, falling this week to as low as 1.5 U.S. cents per kilowatt hour, Lafleur said. Hydro-québec’s hedging strategy — which involves entering into fixed-price sales contracts about a year ahead of time — allowed the company to export power for an average of 4.9 U.S. cents per kilowatt hour in the first quarter, compared with the 2.2 cents it would have otherwise made.

Investment­s will decline this year as constructi­on activity proceeds at reduced speed, Lafleur said. Hydro- Québec was initially planning to invest about $4 billion in the province, he said.

Physical distancing measures “are having an impact on productivi­ty,” Lafleur said. “We can’t work the way we wanted, and project costs are going to be affected. Anytime we send workers north on a plane, we need to leave an empty seat beside them.”

We’re going to make sure the Quebec economy recovers the right way before we go abroad.

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