Power in the land
When things start going right in Ukraine, they soon go wrong. No sooner
had US-based power multinational AES bought into distribution, put
investment capital on the table and signalled interest in generation, than
the country's biggest thermal generator lost its three principal power
stations in a bizarre judicial asset grab.
AES's $68.9 million purchase on 17 April of 75% stakes in two regional
electricity distributors (oblenergos), Kyivoblenergo and Rivneoblenergo,
really was good news for Ukraine's troubled energy sector. AES is to invest
a further $90 million in the two companies, and hopes to lead by example in
tackling non-payment problems. Controlling stakes in a further four
regional distributors - Khersonoblenergo, Kirovohradoblenergo,
Sevastopolenergo and Zhytomyroblenergo - were bought by Vykhodoslovenske
Energeticke Zavody (VEZ) of Slovakia on 24 April for $90 million. The sale
of these six regional distributors, out of a total of 27, comprised the
first succesful, transparent power privatisation. CSFB managed the deal for
the State Property Fund, and hopes were raised in a sector usually
identified with corruption on a grand scale.
Those hopes was soon deflated, though, on 28 April, when the Kurahovska,
Luhanska and Zuevska thermal power stations - three of the five owned by
Ukraine's largest thermal generator, Donbassenergo - were sold off to an
undisclosed buyer for a paltry 160 million hryvna ($30 million) by the
state executor, Ukrspetsyust. The sale was initiated under an obscure debt
recovery law to recover Donbassenergo's debts to Energetika i Palyvo
Ukrainy, a subsidiary of the state oil and gas monopoly Naftogaz Ukrainy.
The fuel and energy ministry and the State Property Fund, who administer
the state's 80% stake in Donbassenergo, were incensed, and the European
Bank for Reconstruction & Development, which lent Donbassenergo $113
million to upgrade another power station, Starobeshevska, made furious
protests. Not furious enough, though. On 27 June Ukraine's Supreme Court
ruled that Donbassenergo's legal challenge to the sale was invalid.
The dispute is unresolved. State Property Fund director Aleksandr Bondar
says the three stations were sold for less than a quarter of their real
value, 700 million hryvna, and that further legal challenges will be
mounted. Meanwhile president Leonid Kuchma, whose attitude to power sector
corruption remains unclear, on 1 August vetoed a law passed by parliament
in an attempt to block future Donbassenergo-type asset grabs, which placed
an indefinite moratorium on court-ordered sales of state companies' assets
and a ban to 1 June 2002 on sales of state power industry holdings.
Privatisation of distributors
AES Silk Road, the AES subsidiary covering the former USSR that cut its
teeth in the tough Georgian and Kazakh markets, is determined to make
things work at its new Ukrainian purchases, Kyivoblenergo and
Rivneoblenergo. Mikhail Malovanyi, director of AES Silk Road's Ukraine
office, said that an investment plan for Rivneoblenergo has been agreed
with the fuel and energy ministry, and one for Kyivoblenergo will follow
soon: over the next five years, AES will invest about $40 million and $50
million respectively in the companies.
"Firstly we will computerise and upgrade the metering of supply from
Energorynok [the state-owned wholesale electricity supplier], and of our
supply to customers. A high level of accuracy is vital," said Malovanyi.
"We will also introduce new billing systems." Traditionally 40% of
Ukrainian power is lost through inefficiency and robbery in transport
systems; in AES's companies it is about 20% and Malovanyi is intent on
driving it down further. He added: "We will modernise all our basic plant:
transformers, switching gear and distribution equipment. In countryside
areas we want to move from wooden poles to concrete ones to ensure greater
reliability of supply."
All the work will go out to international tender. Black & Veatch, who
installed supply accounting systems for AES in Georgia, must be hopeful of
doing some of it. Alstom will be a strong contender: it has been active in
Ukraine since 1993, and has supplied switch gear, monitoring and relay
protection systems and other equipment to the Dniproidroenergo
hydro-generating company, switch gear to the Dnestr power station, and
monitoring equipment to Ukrenergo, the state-owned national transmission
company. It has worked downstream too, and in September last year was
contracted to supply boilers to Kievenergo, the city power company for the
capital, which has been loaned $200 million by the World Bank to modernise
and decentralise heat supply.
Can the Ukrainian authorities, together with AES and VEZ of Slovakia,
succesfully reform distribution? The answer depends in large part on tariff
policy issues. Before privatisation, the government issued a decree
providing for disconnection of non-payers, the new owners of distribution
capacity committed themselves to raising the rate of cash collection from
about 70% to 100%, and to paying for electricity received from Energorynok
in full. A change in tariff methodology was agreed; the scale of increases
depends on the national energy regulatory commission (NERC), the state
regulatory body for the industry. Malovanyi of AES says: "Once our
investment plan has been approved by the NERC, the next step will be for
the commission to acknowledge the need to raise tariffs. We can show the
possibilities available to develop the companies, where investment
programmes have been underfunded for some years. The regulator then has to
decide to raise tariffs - not all at once, but step-by-step over a period
of years."
The issues of tariffs, and debts, will also figure prominently in the
next round of privatisation, in which another 12 regional distributors go
under the hammer. This time it will be tougher: whereas the first six
companies had $136 million of debts between them, which the government
agreed to restructure, the next 12 have total debts of more than $1400
million. Ministers are wary about agreeing to a similar restructuring.
Although the State Property Fund has said it wants to dispose of the
companies this year, market observers say the sale will not happen until
the debt issue is resolved and the NERC completes its current tariff
review.
At CSFB, which has been hired to do the second sale after its success
with the first, energy sector specialist Serhiy Syvoplyas said: "A number
of issues will have to resolved before the sale. The government will have
to make clear its attitude to restructuring the companies' debts, and the
NERC will have to complete the tariff review. Potential bidders will also
want to see clear indications that the government delivers on its promises:
they will want to see that the government is prepared to implement the
decree on discontinuation of supply to non-payers, to support the six
privatised oblenergos in taking a tougher line on non-payment and to
deliver on other promises about tariffs and tariff methodology."
CSFB is now undertaking due diligence on the companies -
Vinnitsaoblenergo, Volynoblenergo, Zakarpattyaoblenergo,
Chernivtsioblenergo, Khmelnitskoblenergo, Cherkasyoblenergo,
Ternopiloblenergo, Zaporizhiaoblenergo, Dniprooblenergo, Krymenergo,
Donetskoblenergo and Kharkivoblenergo - which jointly serve more than 9.8
million customers and in 2000 distributed more than 37,800 GWh.
Generation
In contrast to the World Bank and other multilateral institutions, who
insist that separating generation, transmission and distribution is the
formula for success, some big players seek vertical integration in emerging
markets, Ukraine included. Garry Levesley, president of AES Silk Road,
said: "We certainly want generation capacity in Ukraine. We are a
generation company, and we didn't own any distribution capacity until 1996,
when we went to Kazakhstan and bought power stations - and then realised
the only way we were going to get paid was by getting into distribution. In
Georgia we started in distribution and moved into generation."
Ukraine's four thermal power generators - Donbassenergo, Dniproenergo,
Centrenergo and Zahidenergo, which comprise 14 thermal stations with total
installed capacity of 36.6Gw - are now expected to be sold off between 2002
and 2005. (Two hydro generators, Dniprohydroenergo and Dnisterhydroenergo
(total installed capacity of 4.7Gw), and Energoatom, which owns Ukraine's
five nuclear power stations (capacity 12.8Gw), are legally bound to remain
state-owned.)
The absurd political and legal environment that made possible the
Donbassenergo asset-strip is hardly likely to heighten investors'
enthusiasm for the generators. And, incidentally, it's not only
Donbassenergo at risk: since the whacky power station sale, unnamed buyers
have reportedly been scooping up generating companies' debt, possibly with
a view to further unorthodox acquisitions. Nevertheless, there are
compelling fundamentals that make these assets attractive. Ukraine's
well-known energy shortages are due to poor maintenance, overconsumption by
industry and lack of fuel. Generating capacity remains twice as great as
peak demand, and there is no reason why Ukraine could not again become a
major exporter of power to central and eastern Europe, as it was in Soviet
times.
Indeed two export-oriented generation projects are being co-ordinated by
Kyiv-based Imepower, an alliance of utilities sector financial consultants
Ineko Management and EnCoG (energy consulting group), formed in 1996 by
three former energy ministers.
The first project is to upgrade Dobrotvirska thermal power station in
western Ukraine, near the Polish border. The station burns Polish coal from
the Silesian field as well as Ukrainian coal, and exports power to Poland.
The project, which involves installing three 225Mw power units and
upgrading existing high-voltage transmission lines, will raise export
capacity to 250Mw; $50 million of a total estimated cost of $120 million
has been spent so far, and further investment is sought through a project
company, now 99%-owned by Zakhidenergo. The second, larger, project
envisages reconstruction of Burshtinska, the biggest power station in
western Ukraine, which has scarcely received any investment since being
commissioned in 1965, but which could be upgraded to UCTE-CENTREL standards
and raise its exports to Slovakia, the Czech republic and Hungary. A $60
million first stage of reconstruction is envisaged with a payback period of
four years; wholesale reconstruction would cost $1300 million. Imepower
says a third project - the completion of the Dniester hydro pumped storage
station - would help cover peak demand if Ukraine was to join the UCPTE
system; a tender to manage the project was won last year by
Bahamas-registered ESI Engineering & Construction, who are now negotiating
with Energorynok on the terms of a power purchase agreement.
Vassili Nan'ko, deputy director of Imeko, said: "Projects such as
Burshtinska are vital to Ukraine's integration into the European energy
system. Of course investors are hesitating because of political, legal and
tax issues. But we will see how AES fares in distribution, and perhaps then
things will move on."
Breaking the financial and political vicious circles
In the end much will depend on whether Ukraine can break the vicious
circle of debt, and corrupt practices, which has pervaded the energy sector
for a decade. The fall-out from the collapse of the USSR has been more
devastating, and impoverishing, for Ukraine than for Russia. Little has
been done to reform its outdated, power-guzzling industries and the debts
have kept rising: the distribution companies owe an estimated $2.8 billion
to Energorynok, which owes $2.8 million to the generators, who owe $3.5
billion for gas and other fuel ... mostly to Gazprom of Russia and gas
trader Itera.
There are some good signs. Ukrainian-Russian relations have improved,
much of the gas debt been converted into Ukrainian government bonds,
agreement reached at least in words about how to prevent debts piling up
again - and hopes raised that Russia will stop using the debt as a
political stick to beat Ukraine. The gas trading scam, under which trading
companies allotted quotas by the state in 1995 were used to enrich
criminals, has been exposed, and one of the chief beneficiaries, former
prime minister Pavel Lazarenko, is in jail in the US. Another prominent gas
trade executive of the time, Iulia Timoshenko, underwent a remarkable
conversion and in a brief spell as energy minister this year instituted
tougher accounting standards in the sector and enlivened a task force,
comprising government and multinational institutions, to push reforms
ahead.
Then there are bad things. Georgy Gongadze, a journalist who questioned
Kuchma closely about his own involvement in the Lazarenko scandal, was
brutally murdered, and a political crisis triggered early this year by the
publication of audio tapes on which a voice that seemed to be Kuchma's
urged that Gongadze be "dealt with". Timoshenko was sacked and spent a
while in jail, apparently because she fell out with Kuchma. Reformist prime
minister Viktor Yushchenko was sacked too, in April, and no-one yet knows
how effective his replacement, Anatoly Kinakh, will be.
Ukrainian power is not a market for the fainthearted.
|