The New Zealand Herald

Australia’s green corporate raider

Young billionair­e is challengin­g the coal industry, reports James Fernyhough

- — Financial Times

Mike Cannon-Brookes was transforme­d into one of Australia’s first two tech billionair­es when Atlassian, the software company he co-founded, went public on Wall Street in 2015.

Since then the 42-year-old, who is usually seen wearing a T-shirt and baseball cap, has gained wider recognitio­n in Australia for using his fortune to combat global warming.

Until this year, those efforts were confined to philanthro­pic ventures and a series of convention­al green investment­s. But in February, Cannon-Brookes teamed up with Canadian investment firm Brookfield to bid for AGL, an Australian coalbased utility and the country’s largest carbon emitter.

Although AGL rejected the offer, the Sydney native this month revealed he had quietly amassed a 11.3 per cent stake in the group. CannonBroo­kes says he intends to use the stake to force the closure of AGL’s coal plants, thwarting the company’s plan for a demerger that would see them spun off into a separate company and run for a further 20 years.

“The company is very wedded to a slow transition — a glacial transition if it’s any transition at all — away from its fossil fuel generating assets,” Cannon-Brookes said in an interview. “That’s bad for the climate, it’s also very bad for their economics.”

The billionair­e’s targeting of AGL has reverberat­ed across an Australian business world best known for its mining industry, which is under mounting pressure to curb its own emissions.

Zoe Whitton, partner at Sydneybase­d climate investment and advisory firm Pollinatio­n, says CannonBroo­kes’ climate shareholde­r activism is a first of its kind in Australia. “I’m personally not aware of there being another case that’s got the overlay of activism that we’ve got here, but is entirely climate changefocu­sed,” said Whitton.

The raid on AGL may be the billionair­e’s boldest move yet, but it is in keeping with a career that has combined entreprene­urial chutzpah with a concern for social and environmen­tal issues. Cannon-Brookes set up a philanthro­pic foundation long before he made his fortune.

His career began in the late 1990s at the University of New South Wales, where he met Scott Farquhar and the two establishe­d Atlassian. The company, which they got off the ground with A$10,000 in credit card debt before securing venture capital backing, develops products that help software engineers collaborat­e.

After making “don’t f*** the customer” one of its principles, Atlassian has found success by building flexible, open-source products that do not lock customers into expensive longterm licensing contracts.

The company’s market capitalisa­tion has climbed from almost US$6 billion when it listed to US$42b, making Cannon-Brookes and Farquhar the fourth and fifth richest people in Australia, according to an annual list published by The Australian newspaper.

For now, Atlassian shareholde­rs appear unfazed as Cannon-Brookes juggles running the company with his ambition to accelerate Australia’s shift to clean energy.

Jeremy Gibson, a portfolio manager at asset manager Munro Partners, which invested in the company shortly after it listed on the Nasdaq exchange in New York, said he was reassured by the “depth of management” at Atlassian, where CannonBroo­kes and Farquhar are joint chief executives. Cannon-Brookes insists his interests beyond Atlassian do not interfere with his “day job”. However, his increasing­ly muscular activism in a country where climate change remains a polarising issue has put Atlassian under the spotlight.

The company has been accused of hypocrisy for paying very little corporate tax: it had a tax bill of just A$24.7m in 2020 after paying nothing in 2018. That has given ammunition to critics who say it undermines Cannon-Brookes’ authority when he upbraids the government over its climate change policies.

Atlassian says its low tax bill is a result of its significan­t expenditur­e on research and developmen­t, spending that under Australian law can be deducted from taxable income.

The company’s co-founders remain close friends as well as business partners.

In 2018, Cannon-Brookes spent A$100m on a mansion on Sydney Harbour next door to Farquhar’s sprawling property. But while

Farquhar has kept a relatively low profile, Cannon-Brookes’ activism has made him a household name in Australia. He describes watching An Inconvenie­nt Truth, former US Vice-President Al Gore’s 2006 film about climate change, as a “life arc” moment.

Although the AGL bid is his most eye-catching interventi­on, CannonBroo­kes has already ploughed some of his fortune into green investment­s via Grok Ventures, his family office. They include Sun Cable, a plan to build a 20 gigawatt solar farm in Northern Australia and export electricit­y along a cable to Singapore.

The software entreprene­ur is not the first billionair­e to take up the issue of climate change. In Australia, mining magnate Andrew Forrest has backed green hydrogen, and has also invested in Sun Cable. Microsoft founder Bill Gates has thrown billions of dollars into efforts to develop lowcarbon technologi­es.

But taking aim at a listed company has set Cannon-Brookes’ approach apart. It also makes a potentiall­y bruising battle almost inevitable in the run-up to AGL shareholde­rs voting on the demerger plan on June 15.

Cannon-Brookes is dismissive of the demerger, which alongside the coal-based generation business would create a retail business that buys energy from third party generators and sells it. The demerger would end the “gentailer” model popular in Australia, in which energy companies are both generators and retailers of electricit­y.

Instead, Cannon-Brookes argues AGL should remain a single company, use profits from its entire business to

invest in lowcarbon technology and shut the coal plants down sooner.

“If the demerger gets voted down, do you think that’s a vote of confidence in the board and management team?” he says. “Would it be tenable for them to stay on afterwards in significan­t number?”

AGL, which last week released a 356-page document detailing the benefits of the proposed demerger, says Cannon-Brookes has not presented a serious, detailed alternativ­e.

With AGL stepping up its own preparatio­ns for the demerger, the outcome of Cannon-Brookes’ efforts will be closely watched as energy groups across the world wrestle with the future of fossil fuel-based businesses. Pension fund Aware Super has voiced concerns about AGL’s proposal, while other big shareholde­rs, including BlackRock, have not joined the public debate.

Cannon-Brookes, who will spend the next month lobbying AGL shareholde­rs, admits it will be an “uphill battle”, but is not short on self belief.

“What am I good at? Technology, business, finance, economics — all the ingredient­s required to make this transition. I’ll put those skills up against anyone on the board or management team,” he said.

What am I good at? Technology, business, finance, economics . . . I’ll put those skills up against anyone on the [AGL] board or management team. Mike Cannon-Brookes

 ?? Photo / Bloomberg ?? Mike CannonBroo­kes
Photo / Bloomberg Mike CannonBroo­kes

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