Business Standard

Inox first insolvency case in green energy

- SHREYA JAI & VEENA MANI

The ongoing insolvency heat has caught on in the renewable energy space with Inox Wind being put under the corporate insolvency resolution process. In a rare instance, a Customs agent, Jeena & Company, has dragged Inox to the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) over non-payment of dues totalling ~57 lakh.

At the same time, Inox Wind has laid off close to 400 employees at its manufactur­ing unit. A former employee said Inox Wind was yet to clear his final settlement, which was pending for over four months. “The company has no cash flow whatsoever. It is not even able to fulfil its current orders,” he said.

Deepak Asher, director and group head, corporate finance, Gujarat Fluorochem­icals Ltd (GFL), told Business Standard, “It is a noncase and will be quashed (on appeal).” Inox Wind is a subsidiary of the GFL. Asher is a non-executive director at Inox.

Inox Wind has orders to manufactur­e turbines to generate 300 Mw. A person close to the developmen­t said the company had exhausted its working capital. The company was failing to honour contracts for wind turbine generators, said industry sources.

A text message sent to the company’s spokespers­on and Devansh Jain, wholetime director, Inox Wind, seeking comments on the matter, did not draw a response.

In the NCLT order dated July 11, 2017, the court has appointed an interim resolution profession­al and suspended the powers of Inox Wind’s board of directors. “The management of the affairs shall vest with the interim resolution profession­al and officers and the managers of the ‘corporate debtor’ shall report to the IP, who shall be enjoined to exercise all the powers vested with the IP,” the order states.

In its petition, Jeena & Company, the operationa­l creditor, submitted that Inox Wind had an outstandin­g payment of ~57.5 lakh as of March 25, 2017. It said the petition had been filed as the company had neither paid the amount nor acknowledg­ed any of the demand notices sent. Insolvency profession­als said this was a classic example of the insolvency code actually working as envisioned. These profession­als feel that the code will benefit unsecured creditors like Jeena & Company. This falls under Section 9 of the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016. In such cases, the operationa­l creditor issues a demand notice to the firm. If the firm fails to pay, the operationa­l creditor can introduce insolvency proceeding­s.

With the company issuing an advertisem­ent seeking buyers, the insolvency proceeding­s begin. In the absence of a buyer the committee of creditors will formulate a restructur­ing plan. The code gives a company 180 days for resolution failing which either the company can get an extension for another 90 days or go in for liquidatio­n.

This comes just two months after Inox Wind sold off its portfolio of 260 MW of operationa­l wind power projects and decided to exit the wind farming business. The move was meant to help the parent company pare its debt. Inox Wind kept the wind turbine manufactur­ing business for itself.

The company recently made headlines by winning a 250 Mw project at a historic low bid of ~2.97 per unit in the maiden wind power project tender. The project will come up in Tamil Nadu.

The portfolio sale was to JP Morgan Asset-backed Leap Green Energy Pvt Ltd. The projects are spread over Rajasthan, Maharashtr­a, Madhya Pradesh and Tamil Nadu and are owned and managed by IRL IR Jaisalmer (IRJL). The company did not disclose the transactio­n amount but by market estimates, the deal size is estimated to be close to ~1,300 crore.

Inox Wind executives had then said the deal would help it pare the group company’s debt and help it focus on its core business of wind turbine manufactur­ing.

Sector experts pointed out that the crisis was the result of aggressive expansion by Inox Wind and regulatory hurdles faced by the industry during the past four years.

 ??  ?? In a rare instance, a Customs agent, Jeena & Company, has dragged Inox to NCLT over non-payment of dues
In a rare instance, a Customs agent, Jeena & Company, has dragged Inox to NCLT over non-payment of dues

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