Otago Daily Times

Tiwai closure could be slowed: Meridian

- JENNY RUTH

AUCKLAND: A longer phasedown period for the Tiwai Point aluminium smelter may be possible, but the time for talking about the smelter continuing to operate has passed, Meridian Energy chief executive Neal Barclay has told analysts on a conference call.

Rio Tinto, which owns nearly 80% of New Zealand Aluminium Smelters (NZAS), advised Meridian early on Thursday that the smelter will close in August next year.

Since 2017, NZAS has been able to end its electricit­y supply contract with Meridian on one year’s notice.

One of Meridian’s immediate reactions had been to suspend its special dividends — the company has paid $625 million in special dividends since 2015 — but it intended to maintain its ordinary dividends at 75% to 90% of free cash flow.

‘‘The conversati­on I was having yesterday with Andrew Horvat, who’s the NZAS chair, was about making an offer for a phased closure of the facility, whatever that looks like,’’ Mr Barclay said.

He said he had yet to speak to NZAS chief executive Stew Hamilton, who on Thursday told RNZ there was still a window of opportunit­y to keep the smelter open but that it was closing rapidly.

‘‘We still need to clarify what that means, but that’s not consistent with anything else we’ve heard,’’ Mr Barclay said.

He had heard it said that Rio

Tinto’s announceme­nt yesterday was ‘‘the next level of negotiatio­n’’; if it was, it was a ‘‘pretty cynical’’ tack to take, he said.

However, when he last met Rio Tinto Aluminium chief executive Alf Barrios in December, Mr

Barrios had indicated that he favoured an orderly winddown over some years, rather than just giving a year’s notice, as Rio Tinto did on Thursday.

Mr Barclay said Meridian had found out about the smelter closing at the same time as the market did.

He noted that the contract with the smelter was a financial one, which would continue through to the end of August, but that the actual physical electricit­y the smelter used between now and then was likely to reduce gradually as pot lines were closed down.

While he would not give any details on pricing, Mr Barclay said Meridian had been seeking a greater commitment on timing from Rio Tinto and the most recent proposed deal would have been for four years, at reduced rates and with a demandresp­onse premium.

‘‘More recently, the industry came together and were able to add in a transmissi­on underwrite.’’

Contact Energy, which also has a contract with NZAS, Genesis Energy and Mercury NZ had been part of the industry group making that offer.

That combinatio­n had a total value of $50 million, increasing to close to $60 million or $70 million over the next two or three years, Mr Barclay said.

‘‘Our understand­ing was that it met their US dollar energy cost target they’ve talked about last year.’’

That offer would also have taken the smelter to the midpoint of energy costs globally.

As recently as Tuesday, Mr Barclay said he had been talking to a Rio Tinto official and had said Meridian could do better than that offer if Rio Tinto would commit to keeping the smelter open until 2030.

Meridian had negotiated in good faith and had made meaningful offers, as had the other major generators.

‘‘From our perspectiv­e, it looks like there are bigger issues at play in regards to the whole Rio Tinto portfolio,’’ Mr Barclay said.

Analysts are predicting Meridian will report ‘‘a pretty healthy’’ result for the year ended June, ‘‘which we align with’’, and the ordinary dividend was therefore likely to be strong, he said.

Meridian paid a 5.7c per share firsthalf 86% imputed dividend in April, plus an unimputed special dividend of 2.44c.

Meridian shares closed at $4.51 yesterday, down another 3.8% after Thursday’s 10.8% decline. — BusinessDe­sk

 ?? PHOTO: SUPPLIED ?? Next steps . . . The time for talking about the smelter continuing to operate has passed, Meridian Energy chief executive Neal Barclay says.
PHOTO: SUPPLIED Next steps . . . The time for talking about the smelter continuing to operate has passed, Meridian Energy chief executive Neal Barclay says.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand