Analysis
What went
wrong with the Eskom-BHP Billiton pricing deal?
(Written for Mining magazine, April 2013)
By Stef Terblanche
The highly publicised saga of the special
electricity pricing deal between Eskom and BHP Billiton having gone sour is
like a marriage on the rocks.
On several occasions in the past two decades the two
companies shook hands on sweetheart deals that allowed BHP Billiton to pay a
special preferential price for its electricity.
The South African government at the time sought to
attract big industrial investments. BHP Billiton, or its predecessor, Gencor,
wanted a good return on its investment. Cheap surplus electricity could make it
happen, so Eskom became the proverbial bride.
But conditions have changed dramatically since then,
and now Eskom wants out.
Using a substantial amount of electricity at around
2,000MW of national power output for its Richards Bay smelters, or about 9% of
Eskom’s total output for its South African and Mozambican smelters
combined, the rate BHP Billiton is
currently paying is well below the cost of generating it.
BHP Billiton, however, argues that the true price
can only be calculated over the full life of the contracts. Energy Intensive
User Group (EIUG) chairman Mike Rossouw agrees with that view, saying it makes
no sense to work only with a “snapshot price at a particular point in time”.
Nonetheless, with Eskom currently seemingly paying more
to BHP Billiton for the coal needed to generate one kilowatt of electricity
than what the mining group pays per kilowatt for electricity used in its
aluminium smelters, Eskom is of the opinion that the consequences of the deal
has become a huge burden.
Eskom found itself under ever more pressure after
the 2008 electricity crisis to deliver sufficient electricity to keep the
wheels of industry turning and the lights burning in South Africa. As a result
the state power utility says since 2009 it tried to renegotiate the terms of
the deals with BHP.
On May 30, 2010 BHP Billiton issued this statement:
“Eskom and BHP Billiton today announced that they have reached agreement on an
amended power supply contract for the Mozal aluminium smelter in Mozambique.
Discussions relating to the contracts for the supply of electricity to the
Hillside and Bayside smelters in South Africa will continue over the coming
months with the intention of concluding binding agreements before the end of
Eskom's 2010/11 financial year.”
The latter never happened, and now BHP Billiton has
dug its heels in. A deal is a deal, and needs to be honoured, it says.
In the same statement BHP Billiton said while
negotiations would continue, “the BHP Billiton smelter contracts at Hillside
and Bayside in Richards Bay will remain firm and binding”. Eskom, it said,
would in turn maintain its “interruptibility” at the smelters in line with the
provisions of the contract. To save power at peak times, Eskom periodically
shuts down power supply to the smelter, as with other intensive energy users.
Subsequently last October Eskom submitted an
application to the National Energy Regulator of South Africa (Nersa) to review
the terms of the preferential deals. At present the parties are not
negotiating.
But it was the tenacious probing of an enterprising
journalist and the eventual intervention of the courts that brought the full
extent and the finer details – previously shrouded in secrecy - of this
increasingly unhappy marriage out into the open last month. Dirty linen was
displayed, the public gasped in horror, tongues were set wagging, and dire
warnings of all kinds followed.
But exactly how did this all come about and what
went wrong? Are there any lessons to be learnt by South Africa’s mining
industry which is one of the largest consumers of electricity in the country?
Eskom says the mining industry takes about 15% of
its output, but EIUG’s Rossouw says the entire industrial sector that includes
mining and related activities such as smelters probably uses around 40%.
The deal uncovered
Having been aware of a secret deal between Eskom and
BHP, Jan de Lange, a mining journalist with Sake24, became determined to
uncover the deal after spotting a R9.3-billion loss attributed to “embedded
derivatives” in Eskom’s 2009 results.
When both companies refused to divulge any details,
Sake24 and its parent, Media24, went to court using the Promotion of Access to
Information Act (PAIA) to try and obtain information from Eskom. Media24 won
both the initial case and Eskom’s subsequent appeal.
Energy analyst and technology publisher Chris
Yelland, who has written an extensive analysis of the issue, says the first
deal concerning BHP’s Hillside Potlines 1 and 2 was concluded in 1992. At the
time BHP Billiton was still known as Gencor. Electricity supply was still
regulated by legislation that was replaced with new legislation after 1994 and
which also replaced the old Electricity Control Council with the National
Energy Regulator of South Africa (Nersa). Since 1995 Nersa among other things
has to approve all electricity tariff issues.
Yelland says the original contract was signed on 11
November 1992 at a time when Dr. Ian McRae was the CEO of Eskom, and
subsequently came into effect on 30 July 1995 at a time when Dr. McRae was the
first chairman and CEO of the newly established Nersa.
When asked about this an Eskom spokesperson said the
deal was concluded before Nersa came into being in 1995.
“Prior to that, the Electricity Control Board
regulated some aspects of the electricity supply industry but was not an
economic regulator and its approval for the negotiated pricing agreements at
Hillside and Bayside was not required. Eskom did follow proper and appropriate
governance processes in terms of the legislation,” said the spokesperson.
Rossouw is of the opinion that the contracts were
signed at the time with the necessary approval of the relevant authorities
regardless of whether it was Nersa or not.
A second agreement for Hillside Potline 3 was signed
in December 2001 between Billiton and Eskom and was to come into effect by 30
June 2004, says Yelland. In a written reply to our questions, Eskom said “a
supplementary Hillside agreement was signed in 2003 which was approved by the
regulator”.
Nonetheless, this deal was differently structured
from the first one. But it still kept the price BHP Billiton paid well below
what the public was being charged after Eskom’s 2008 electricity crisis and its
rolling blackouts as well as below Eskom’s cost to produce this power.
The Hillside Potline 3 agreement had a suspensive
clause that the special pricing arrangement had to be approved by Nersa by no
later than 18 December 2001. In a letter to BHP Billiton dated 5 February 2002,
Eskom confirmed Nersa’s approval.
At the time, from 1999 up to 2004, Dr. Xolani
Mkwhanazi was the CEO of Nersa which gave the approval to Eskom and Billiton.
Not long afterwards, in January 2005, BHP Billiton appointed Dr Mkwhanazi as
chief operating officer at Aluminium Southern Africa which operated its
Richards Bay and Mozambican smelters. In October 2008 he became chairman of BHP
Billiton South Africa, a position he still holds. Dr Mkwhanazi is also a past
chairman of the Chamber of Mines.
Rising costs
Given the low cost of producing electricity at the
time and the high aluminium prices, these deals were beneficial for both
parties. But neither deal was structured to keep pace with Eskom’s 2008 crisis,
its need for a fast-tracked generating capacity expansion programme, the steep
rises in the cost of producing electricity, or the changes in the aluminium
price.
Yelland says because of the way the deal was
structured the electricity rates for the Hillside smelters “were not cost
reflective in any sense”. The problem arose when Eskom's operating costs shot
up by 168% from about 15c in 2007 to the current 47c/kWh.
These rates have now become less than half Eskom’s
current average cost of supply, and less than Eskom’s current cost of primary
energy.
Reporting on the matter after Media24 won the court
cases, De Lange calculated that BHP pays 23c/kWh at its Hillside smelters and
34c at its Mozal smelter in Mozambique. In comparison factories pay R1.61 and households
pay R1.40. Eskom says the average tariff paid by other large mining companies is
56c/kWh.
According to research undertaken by ENF Consulting
on behalf of Sake24 for a number of years the rate BHP paid Eskom did not cover
the cost of Eskom’s primary energy, that is, the coal it bought to produce the
energy. Of the 125Mt of coal used by Eskom every year, some 18% (between 18Mtpa
and 20Mtpa) is sold to it by BHP Billiton.
However with steep increases in the price of coal
since 2008, and with much of the hedging against the market price with Eskom’s
cost-plus contracts starting to fall away, Sake24’s research found that Eskom’s
primary energy since 2008 has increased by around 25% per year from R23.7bn in
2009 to R36.6bn last year.
De Lange has calculated that BHP Billiton’s Hillside
deal has already cost Eskom R10.7bn. That is where the public outcry arose.
With the constant steep escalation in electricity tariffs for ordinary
household consumers, the public believes it has been footing this bill.
And there is more to come. De Lange concludes that
conservatively Eskom’s primary energy cost will most likely increase by a
further 15% per year over the coming years.
However, calculating the exact cost to all parties
concerned is a very complex affair, and as Rossouw and Dr Mkwhanazi have
pointed out, it cannot be isolated at a particular point in time, but should be
viewed within the context of the total life of the contract. The contracts are
to run for 25 years.
Risk sharing
In an open letter published in Business Day on April 3, Dr Mkhwanazi stated BHP Billiton’s view
that “the Eskom contracts were negotiated on a risk-sharing basis and in terms
of a recognised international model”.
He said Billiton had invested more than R60bn in its
aluminium business in Southern Africa in direct response to incentives of the
South African and Mozambican governments to promote industrial development. The
pricing agreements were concluded “to ensure the financial viability of the
smelters over the long term” and to absorb Eskom’s excess capacity (about 35%)
at the time.
Dr Mkhwanazi denied that the pricing agreements have
been detrimental to Eskom and other consumers, saying that due to the structure
of the agreements, BHP Billiton for many years paid above the standard
electricity tariff for industry.
“During the period of the contracts, we have paid
more for the electricity than the cost of supply. As a result of these
contracts, Eskom has generated significant additional revenues and benefits,
which have contributed to the cost of establishing the electricity generation
and transmission infrastructure in South Africa.”
“BHP Billiton expects our contracts to be honoured.
As a business, we have a responsibility to fulfil our obligations to our
employees, customers, suppliers and shareholders and the broader community of
Richards Bay and KwaZulu-Natal,” he said.
In any case, Mkhwanazi says, to help Eskom maintain
a reliable supply of electricity in the country, BHP Billiton in 2008 mothballed
two potlines at its Bayside smelter, while it allows Eskom to interrupt supply
to its smelters periodically without compensation for lost production. BHP
Billiton also continues meeting its 10% power-reduction target.
Lacked transparency
Perhaps the Achilles heel of these agreements was
the complete lack of transparency despite the fact that it involved a
state-owned company funded with public money.
When De Lange started probing the deal he did so in
the public interest. The general point of view was that Eskom being a public
company, and given the fact that the general public was forced to pay ever more
for its electricity while BHP Billiton as one of the single biggest consumers
of electricity was allowed to pay tariffs below cost, the agreements undermined
the public’s interests. Regardless of merit, the popular view was that vast
profits were being made at the public’s expense.
Commenting after winning the appeal case Media24’s
attorney, Willem de Klerk, said that the court’s decision showed that large
corporations doing business with state entities may expect their commercial
dealings to be placed under the spotlight. Claiming prejudice to their business
would not be sufficient to prevent it.
Standard practice
Various commentators, including Dr Mkhwanazi, have
pointed out that such preferential pricing agreements are nonetheless standard
practice internationally.
An example is the current negotiations taking place
in New Zealand between the owners of the Tiwai Pt aluminium smelter and the
state-owned Meridian Energy for a preferential pricing deal. Last year Rio
Tinto said the smelter could close if it did not get cheaper power from
Meridian Energy, which would lead to significant job losses and a blow to the
local economy.
And the Chinese chrome processor, Afro-Chine
Smelting, has announced it was about to build six chrome smelters in
neighbouring Zimbabwe. Before making the announcement, the Chinese company had
been negotiating with the Zimbabwe Electricity Transmission & Distribution
Company for uninterrupted power supply to the smelters. It is believed that a
preferential pricing arrangement may also have been part of these discussions.
What’s at stake?
Mhkwanazi had made it clear that BHP Billiton
expects the contracts to be honoured. Equally, Eskom has made it clear it wants
them to be reviewed and changed due to the dramatically changed conditions.
“If the contracts are changed unilaterally,
everybody is going to lose. The government, Eskom, Nersa, BHP Billiton and
Eskom’s existing customers will all lose,” says Rossouw.
The potential losses for Eskom are obvious against
the background of its need to fund an expensive capacity expansion programme
and massive escalation in the cost of energy. If it cannot recover a part of
these costs from BHP Billiton, it may seek to once again pass on the cost to
other electricity consumers, a move that Nersa could block as it has already
done with Eskom’s industrial power buy-back programme.
In a worst-case scenario a lack of any solution to
the problem could seriously affect Eskom’s ability to build the required new
power stations on time to meet anticipated future electricity demand. Already
there are disturbing warnings that the country could once again run into
serious electricity supply problems this winter. Then the entire country will
be on the losing side.
On the other hand, although BHP Billiton has denied
in the past that it has any intention of pulling out of South Africa, some
commentators have in recent weeks expressed the opinion that, if the
preferential electricity pricing agreements are not honoured, BHP Billiton may
simply shut down the smelters and leave.
If that were to happen it would adversely affect the 3,000 people employed at the smelters, or the 20,000 jobs in South Africa BHP Billiton says have been created from the aluminium investments. In addition, says BHP Billiton, these jobs affect the livelihoods of about 33,000 people, with economic income for about 90,000 dependents.
Shutting down these smelters would be a huge loss
for the economy. Hillside is one of the world’s most advanced and efficient
aluminium smelters, produces high quality primary aluminium and it is the
largest producer of standard aluminium ingots in the southern hemisphere, says
BHP Billiton. And Bayside is the only producer of value-added primary aluminium
products in Southern Africa, all of it used by the local market.
“Any unilateral changes to a signed and agreed
contract would send absolutely the wrong message to the investor community,”
says Rossouw about the potential consequences for South Africa. Many other
commentators have issued similar warnings, as did Dr Mkhwanazi.
“Business needs maximum encouragement and support to
make these long-term investments for the benefit of society. Risks have to be
balanced before investment takes place. Legal due process, adherence to the
constitution, sanctity of contract, regulatory certainty, certainty around
fiscal provisions at the outset, nonretrospectivity and security of tenure are
all essential,” says Mkhwanazi.
So, is there a solution to what seems to be a
serious impasse?
“Absolutely,” says Rossouw. “The solution is that
the parties, namely government, Nersa, Eskom and BHP Billiton, must sit down
and negotiate a practical solution which, as far as I know, they have never
done. And if Nersa finds itself to be conflicted, they can make use of an
arbitrator.”
For the sake of everybody concerned, hopefully this
advice will not fall on deaf ears.
© Copyright 2013 Stef Terblanche – No article or part thereof may be reproduced, printed or published without the permission of the author, while recognition must be given to the author and the publication that first published it.
© Copyright 2013 Stef Terblanche – No article or part thereof may be reproduced, printed or published without the permission of the author, while recognition must be given to the author and the publication that first published it.