Business Standard

Abbot Point may become a stranded asset: Report

- PRESS TRUST OF INDIA

The Adani Group's Abbot Point Coal Terminal in Australia faces the risk of becoming a stranded asset if its proposed Carmichael mine fails to get 1 billion Australian dollar (AUD) subsidy, according to a report by US-based Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis (IEEFA).

The IEEFA, which conducts research and analysis on financial and economic issues related to energy and environmen­t, has found that the Adanis’ Abbot Point Coal Terminal (AAPCT) is excessivel­y leveraged and promises negative shareholde­rs’ equity.

The Abbot Point terminal, IEEFA said, also "runs the risk of becoming a stranded asset if Adani's proposed Carmichael mine does not get the AUD 1 billion Australian taxpayer subsidy it seeks."

The IEEFA further said the analysis finds more broadly that "Adani's entire AUD 3.5 billion debt-funded investment in Australia is at grave risk."

Currently, operating at just over 50 per cent capacity, the 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," Tim Buckley, lead author of the report and IEEFA's director of energy finance studies, Australasi­a was quoted as saying in the report.

"The potential for a loss of up to AUD 1.5 billion 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," he said.

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