Glencore and five other miners backing the world’s most expensive coal port in Australia face extra annual charges of A$150mn after the restructuring of one of their partners this month, the latest to buckle under slumping commodity prices.
The additional charge will deal a blow to the remaining backers of the A$2.6bn ($2bn) Wiggins Island Coal Export Terminal (WICET) in east Australia at a time when they are grappling with floundering coal markets.
Mining and trading giant Glencore and seven partners began negotiations to build WICET in 2008 near the height of a coal boom, but prices have plunged 75% since then on global oversupply, China’s slowing economy and competition from natural gas.
Expecting coal markets to remain strong, the partners had agreed to pay port fees for 27mn tonnes whether they shipped that volume or not – setting themselves a tonnage charge as much as five-times higher than other coal ports. The project currently charges around A$20 a tonne, several people familiar with the terms said. Neighbouring RG Tanna coal port at Gladstone charges about $5 a tonne. WICET chief executive Marcus McAuliffe declined to comment on the charge.
But adding to the partners’ woes – and those of their 19 lenders, owed more than $3bn – coal prices have now pushed two of WICET’s original owners, Cockatoo Coal and Bandanna Energy, into administration.
Both were stung by port charges for capacity they were never able to produce after coal prices crashed to nine-year lows and funding for their projects dried up. “The world didn’t unfold, the coal mining sector didn’t unfold, and the mine development didn’t unfold the way everyone was hoping for. Then they were left paying four times what they could pay shipping through the terminal next door,” said Stephen Longley at PPB Advisory, the administrator for Cockatoo, which emerged from a restructuring this month.
The grand hope when it was planned was that WICET would eventually ship 120mn tonnes a year, fed by what would have been Australia’s biggest coal mine, Xstrata’s Wandoan. But Glencore shelved Wandoan in 2013 after taking over Xstrata.  Under the terms of the port agreement, the rest of the WICET partners – Glencore, Wesfarmers, Baosteel’s Aquila Resources, Yancoal Australia, Guangdong Rising Assets Management’s Caledon Coal and New Hope Corp - now have to pay the amount that would have been due from Cockatoo and Bandanna – A$150mn a year.
“Every time one drops it makes it more challenging for the rest,” said Thomas Jacquot, a senior director at Standard & Poor’s.
Glencore played down the impact of the extra costs, indicating that charges would be capped if any further partners dropped out.
“The incremental costs to Glencore imposed by exiting users at WICET are contained by commercial protections and must be viewed in the context of our greater global coal production business,” it said in an emailed statement.  The other remaining partners declined to comment.  Glencore must shoulder 40% of the costs, reflecting its share of the port’s 27mn tonnes a year capacity, meaning it has taken on an extra A$60mn a year in costs on top of the A$218mn a year it was already paying.

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