The reporting group for energy & utilities

Contents
Scope of this chapter


This chapter is a supplement to the general industry version of Applying IFRS. The guidance in the general industry chapters of Applying IFRS is applicable to energy and utility entities as are the requirements of all IFRS standards. This chapter deals with certain issues that are specific to the reporting group for energy and utility entities and provides guidance on the application of IFRS.

 

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The energy and utility sectors are both capital intensive. There is a long period of time between the investment proposal
(application to explore for oil and gas, to build a power station, etc) and the first output and positive cash flows. The demand
for capital and long lead time has given rise to a practice in the industry of sharing the burden and risk of exploration and
start-up with other industry players, governments or users of output. These arrangements are seen in multiple forms and
are addressed in this chapter. They include:

Joint ventures;
Investments with less than joint control, including undivided interests;
Production sharing arrangements and concessions; and
Co-located assets


Joint ventures


A joint venture is distinguished by the presence of joint control; the contractually agreed sharing of control over an economic activity [IAS31R.2] . Joint control requires all substantive decisions to be unanimously agreed by all parties sharing joint control. The requirement for a large voting majority, for example 80%, will not necessarily be sufficient to establish joint control.

There are three forms of joint venture; jointly controlled operations, jointly controlled assets and jointly controlled entities. All three are used in the energy industry but the most common is jointly controlled assets, most particularly in oil and gas exploration, development and production.

A joint venture may have two or more parties although a joint control assertion is progressively difficult to sustain beyond three or four venturers . Control or joint control must also be carefully evaluated where the government is a party to the joint venture. The government party may have a stronger role than the joint venture contract suggests.

Joint ventures in which one of the partners sharing control has a very small ownership interest should also be considered carefully and the reasons behind the other partners being prepared to share control with a very small stakeholder should be understood. One venturer acting as operator for practical day-to-day purposes does not necessarily prevent joint control existing [IAS31R.12].

The accounting by a venturer for the formation of a jointly controlled entity is prescribed by IFRS although management has a choice in how to present its holdings in jointly controlled entities on an ongoing basis. The accounting for joint operations and joint assets are prescribed by IFRS.

Jointly controlled operations
Each venturer uses its own property, plant and equipment and carries its own inventory. It also incurs its own expenses and liabilities and raises its own finance. Operations that involve a sequential process to be performed in producing the finished goods lend themselves well to the joint operations format, with each venturer performing one part of the sequential process. For example, joint operations are often found where one party controls mineral rights and has production facilities and another party has transport facilities and / or processing capacity . The parties to the joint operation will share the revenue and expenses of the jointly produced end product. Each will retain title and control of its own assets.

The venturer should recognise 100% of the assets it controls and the liabilities it incurs as well as its own expenses and its share of income from the sale of goods or services from the JV.

Jointly controlled assets
The oil and gas industry is one of the few areas where jointly controlled assets are commonly found. A jointly controlled asset is usually constructed by the joint owners, provides an essential shared service and is not a separate legal entity. The venturers will hold joint legal title over the asset. An example would be a pipeline, refinery or offshore loading platform that is jointly constructed and owned by the oil companies with production facilities in a large field or group of fields. The venturers may also contribute existing assets or sell a share of an existing asset to a co-venturer but these are more likely to result in a jointly controlled entity rather than a jointly controlled asset.

Each party to a jointly controlled asset should recognise:

its share of the jointly controlled asset, classified according to the nature of the asset;
any liabilities the venturer has incurred;
its proportionate share of any liabilities that arise from the jointly controlled assets ;
its share of expenses from the operation of the assets; and
any income arising from the operation of the assets (for example, ancillary fees from use by third parties).

Jointly controlled assets tend to reflect the sharing of costs and risks rather than the sharing of profits.

The contribution of assets to a jointly controlled asset arrangement will result in a partial disposal of that asset by the contributing venturer. The interest in that asset by the other venturers will be at their share of the fair value of the asset at the date of contribution. The accounting for an interest in jointly controlled assets is similar to the proportional consolidation model applied for jointly controlled entities as described in 126.2.3 below.

Jointly controlled entities - Formation
A jointly controlled entity is a JV that involves the establishment of a separate legal entity - a corporation, partnership or other entity - that the venturer has an ownership interest in . The JV entity operates in the same way as other entities except that a contractual arrangement between the venturers establishes joint control over the operations of the entity . Each venturer is entitled to a share of the output or financial result of the joint venture.

The venturers often contribute fixed assets (or the commitment to construct such), mineral rights or cash and other assets. The formation of a jointly controlled entity requires the venturer to account for the assets it has contributed as a partial disposal.

For example, a jointly controlled entity is established in which each venturer has a 50% interest. One party contributes mineral rights and the other party contributes production facilities. Each party has disposed of 50% of its interest in its own assets and acquired a 50% interest in the other party's assets. Both will recognise a gain or loss based on their share of the fair value of the asset received less the share of the book value of the asset disposed of [SIC-13.5] .

There may be limited circumstances where gain recognition is not appropriate:

when the risks and rewards relating to the assets have not been transferred (seldom occurs where control of the asset is with the JV);
the gain or loss cannot be measured reliably; or
the contribution lacks commercial substance.

The contribution of an existing business by one venturer will often result in the recognition of goodwill by the other venturers . This is because the other venturers are acquiring a part-interest in that business. The definition of a business should be considered when identifying whether the contribution represents a business [IFRS3.AppendixA]. Typically interests in a mineral deposit that is in the development or production stages will be a business whereas an interest in an exploration phase resource will not and should be accounted for as an interest in assets.

The existing goodwill present in a business contributed to a joint venture by one venturer is calculated by the other venturers in the same way as goodwill present in a business combination.

The purchase of an additional interest in a jointly controlled entity will result in the recognition of an additional interest in the assets and liabilities of the jointly controlled entity. The additional interest is recognised at the fair value at the date of acquiring the additional interest but only to the extent of the newly acquired interest in the venture .

Jointly controlled operations and jointly controlled assets typically represent the sharing of costs and physical operations. Jointly controlled entities may include the sharing of physical operations but always include the sharing of financial results rather than just the sharing of costs.

Jointly controlled entities - presentation
A venturer has a choice of presentation for its investments in jointly controlled entities. The venturer can use proportionate consolidation and show its interest in the assets, liabilities, revenues and expenses of the entity or it can apply equity accounting . Both methods will generally produce the same net financial results and differ only in presentation .

An entity must choose a single method of accounting for its interests in jointly controlled entities and apply it consistently . The joint venture must apply IFRS using the same accounting policies as the venturer. The venturer must have sufficient information to convert financial results reported under national GAAP to IFRS for consolidation when using either proportionate method or equity method. There is no impracticability exception . It is increasingly common to see each venture party's right to financial information on an appropriate basis of accounting form part of the contractual arrangement to establish the joint venture.

Investments with less than joint control (including undivided interests)


Energy and utilities entities may take an ownership interest in a joint venture or other legal entity but not be one of the venturers. This can arise with shared assets such as a pipeline where the group of users is too wide for joint control to be practical. It also may result where the investor wishes to retain influence and access to information but not joint control. Often the legal entity will own a single asset or closely related group of assets such as a cracking plant or storage facility.

Joint venture accounting, as set out in IAS 31, cannot be applied if there is not joint control. Investments in which an investor does not have control or joint control are accounted for according to the nature of the investment and level of voting power held. This could be one of the following, each of which is considered further below:

Investment in associate where investor has significant influence over an entity. Equity accounting is applied;
Investment in available for sales financial asset where investor has less than significant influence in an entity. Fair value accounting is applied;
Undivided interest where investor has direct ownership interest in an asset. Recognise investor's share of asset at cost less accumulated depreciation and accumulated impairment.

The interest is treated as an investment and is either accounted for as an associate under IAS 28 where the investor has significant influence or an available for sale asset under IAS 39 where an entity is involved. The investment will often represent an undivided interest in fixed assets owned by an unlisted company. However, it is not appropriate to carry the investment at cost less impairment when a reliable fair value can be determined . Management must obtain the information to allow equity accounting or develop a process to estimate the fair value at every reporting date.

An investment directly in the asset itself rather than in an entity is sometimes used for certain assets. The investment will not qualify as jointly controlled assets if there is no joint control and equity accounting or fair value accounting cannot be applied if there is no entity. An undivided interest should therefore be classified as a non-current investment and carried at cost less accumulated depreciation and accumulated impairment . This classification is similar to PPE but differs in so far as the investor does not control the underlying item of PPE.

An undivided interest in an asset is normally accompanied by a requirement to incur a proportionate share of the operating and maintenance costs of the asset. These costs should be recognised as expenses in the income statement when incurred and classified in the same way as equivalent costs for wholly owned assets.


Production sharing arrangements and concessions


There are as many forms of production sharing arrangements (PSA) and concessions as there are combinations of national, regional and municipal governments in oil producing areas.

A PSA is the method whereby governments facilitate the exploitation of their country's mineral resources by taking advantage of the expertise of a commercial oil and gas entity. Governments, particularly in emerging nations, try to provide a stable regulatory and tax regime to create sufficient certainty for commercial entities to invest in an expensive and long lived development process. An oil and gas entity will undertake exploration, supply the capital, develop the resources found, build the infrastructure and lift the natural resources. The government retains title to the mineral resources (whatever the quantity that is ultimately extracted) and often the legal title to all fixed assets constructed to exploit the resources. The government will take a percentage share of the output which may be delivered in product or paid in cash under an agreed pricing formula. The operating entity may only be entitled to recover specified costs plus an agreed profit margin. It may have the right to extract resources over a specified period of time.

A concession agreement is much the same although the entity will retain legal title to its assets and does not share production with the government. The government will still be compensated based on production quantities and prices - this is often described as a concession rent, royalty or a tax.

PSAs and concessions are not standard even with the same legal jurisdiction. The more significant a new field is expected to be, the more likely that the relevant government will write specific legislation or regulations for it. Each must be evaluated and accounted for in accordance with the substance of the arrangement. The entity's previous experience of dealing with the relevant government will also be important as it is not uncommon for governments to force changes in PSAs or concessions based on changes in market conditions or environmental factors. An agreement may contain a right of renewal with no significant incremental cost. The government may have a policy or practice with regard to renewal. These should be assessed when estimating the expected life of the agreement.

The IFRIC has a long running discussion on concession accounting that is expected to result in an interpretation in 2005/2006. The interpretation will not be specifically directed at PSAs and concession accounting but many agreements may well be captured by it. Management should continue to monitor developments as an interpretation might force significant changes in accounting for concessions and PSAs that resemble concessions.

Exploration, development and production assets in PSAs
The legal form of the PSA or concession should not impact the recognition of exploration and evaluation (E&E) assets or production assets . Costs that meet the criteria of IFRS 6, IAS 38 or IAS 16 should be recognised in accordance with the usual criteria where the entity is exposed to the majority of the economic risks and has access to the probable future economic benefits of the assets. The period of the PSA or concession should be longer than the expected useful life of the majority of the constructed assets. The probable mineral resources and current prices should provide evidence that E&E, development and fixed asset investment will be recovered during the concession period. Assets are appropriately recorded on the balance sheet of the entity beyond the E&E phase, if both conditions are present .

A PSA that is shorter than the expected useful life of the related production assets or is a cost plus arrangement can represent an arrangement whereby the government compensates the entity for exploration, development and construction of fixed assets. The entity can continue to capitalise E&E and development costs but fixed assets are not capitalised as such. The entity instead may have a receivable from the government where it is allowed to retain oil extracted to the extent of costs incurred plus a profit margin. The accounting applied in these circumstances is therefore in accordance with IAS 39 rather than IAS 16.

All assets recognised are then accounted for under the usual policies of the entity for subsequent measurement, depreciation, amortisation, impairment testing and de-recognition. Assets should be fully depreciated or amortised on a units-of-production basis by the date that control passes back to the government or the concession ends. A PSA is almost always a separate CGU for impairment testing purposes once in production .

Revenue and costs of PSAs and concessions
The entity should record only its share of oil under a PSA as revenue. Oil extracted on behalf of a government is not revenue or a production cost . The entity acts as the government's agent to extract and deliver the oil or sell the oil and remit the proceeds. Many PSAs specify that income taxes owed by the entity are paid in delivered oil rather than cash. 'Tax oil' is recorded as revenue and as a reduction of the current tax liability to reflect the substance of the arrangement where the entity delivers oil to the value of its current tax liability . Any volume based tax is accounted for as royalty or excise tax within operating results .

Assets subject to depreciation, depletion or amortisation should be expensed in a manner that reflects the consumption of their economic benefits. The units-of- production basis is usually the appropriate method .


Concessions in utilities


Concessions in power and water utilities are found as 'build, operate and transfer' (BOTs) or 'build, own, operate and transfer' (BOOTs) arrangements. The government will contract with an entity to construct a substantial generating station, dam or transmission network. The entity may use a sub-contractor for the construction and then take control of the asset or operate the asset for the government. These arrangements must be evaluated in a similar way to the concessions and PSAs described above. The accounting should follow the economic substance of the arrangements.


Co-located assets


Power and water companies particularly may construct generating or treatment facilities at customer locations on property owned or controlled by the customer. This occurs particularly where a customer is a heavy user of power and steam or produces substantial waste water requiring treatment before discharge. These arrangements may also be found where the customer produces waste by-products that can be burned to produce electricity.

These arrangements may have the substance of a finance lease under IAS 17R.4 where the customer has the majority of the risks and rewards incidental to ownership of the asset [IFRIC4]. Some of the characteristics consistent with a finance lease are where the customer takes the majority of the output and makes payments for the asset to 'stand ready' in addition to payments for output received. A common indicator of a finance lease is that the customer provides a de facto guarantee of obligations assumed to finance the facility. The guarantee may take the form of a take or pay contract or an outright guarantee of indebtedness.

Where the utility has other customers, such that the majority of normal capacity production is sold to third parties, the elements of a finance lease are not usually present and the arrangement is accounted for as owned generating assets.


Disclosures


There are specific and extensive disclosure requirements associated with each of the topics above. The relevant general chapters of Applying IFRS and the specific standards should be consulted for all arrangements that are present.



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