Hawaiian Electric: It’s ‘Misconception’ That Merger Deal Expires Friday
Company officials aren’t too concerned about the deadline for either side to walk away from the $4.3 billion buyout without paying $95 million in fees.
Florida-based NextEra Energy has聽until Friday to walk away from their $4.3 billion merger deal with Hawaiian Electric Industries without paying a $90 million termination fee and up to $5 million in related expenses.
Hawaii Chair Randy Iwase has said he and his two fellow commissioners won鈥檛 be rushed into making a decision on the proposed buyout, and there was no indication that their order would come down this week.
In an interview last Friday, Hawaiian Electric Co. officials showed no sign that they’d be walking away from the deal. Meanwhile, NextEra wasn’t talking.
Lynne Unemori, HECO vice president of corporate relations, said the two companies don鈥檛 have to agree to an extension to keep the deal alive while waiting for regulatory approval.
鈥淭his is behind the misconception that everything somehow expires June 3 when really it can continue on,鈥 she said. 鈥淚f nobody does anything, it just continues on. You don鈥檛 have to affirmatively extend.鈥
HECO President and CEO Alan Oshima said there鈥檚 been no communication with NextEra about the walk-away date. He was very matter of fact when briefly discussing it last week during a meeting with the Civil Beat Editorial Board.
鈥淚f nobody does anything, it just continues on.” 鈥 Lynne Unemori, HECO vice president
When asked his thoughts about the June 3 date, Oshima鈥檚 first response was, 鈥淚s it really next Friday?鈥
鈥淲e鈥檒l be watching our emails to see if something comes out,鈥 he said.
NextEra spokesman Rob Gould declined to comment Tuesday.
If NextEra decides to walk away after Friday and ends up having to pay the $95 million to HEI, Oshima said it would be up to the company鈥檚 board of directors to decide what to do with the money.
There鈥檚 been concern that it might go to shareholders instead of going back to customers or just staying with the company for other uses.
Oshima wouldn鈥檛 speculate. 鈥淚n the end, it may be a process,鈥 he said.
HEI and NextEra first submitted their change-of-control application to state utility regulators in January 2015.
The ensuing 17 months have been filled with public campaigns for and against the merger, occasionally聽heated public hearings and a weeks-long evidentiary hearing before the PUC that wrapped up March 1.
The past two months have been mostly quiet as state regulators sift through the transcripts from the quasi-judicial evidentiary process and more than 80,000 pages that have been filed in the PUC docket for the case.
Iwase initially projected having a decision by June, but has since said his best guess is sometime this summer.
The PUC can reject the deal outright, approve it as proposed or sign off on it with certain conditions 鈥 the last option being the outcome many industry insiders expect.
HEI and NextEra can accept the commissioners鈥 decision, ask them to reconsider it or challenge it in court.聽
Officials from both companies have maintained that the deal is in the public鈥檚 interest. They have pointed at a promise of $60 million in customer savings over four years and the ability to expedite plans to ween the state off imported oil due to NextEra鈥檚 expertise in renewable energy and greater聽buying power. NextEra has reported revenues of roughly $17 billion.
Their arguments have not persuaded Gov. David Ige, Consumer Advocate Jeff Ono, top state energy officials or roughly two dozen nonprofits and other groups that intervened in the merger case.
Ige has doubts about聽the companies鈥 commitment to the state mandate of achieving 100 percent of its electricity use from renewable sources by 2045. And he has opposed their plans to use liquefied natural gas as a bridge fuel.
鈥淲e have to do what we think is best for our customers.” 鈥 Alan Oshima, HECO president
Hawaiian Electric announced last month that it has聽negotiated a huge deal with Fortis to import liquefied natural gas聽from Canada that could mean slightly lower utility bills.
HEI owns Hawaiian Electric, Maui Electric and Hawaii Electric Light, which collectively provide power to 457,800 residential customers on Oahu, Maui, Molokai, Lanai and the Big Island.
The PUC would still have to approve the liquefied natural gas plan and the governor controls the permitting process, making it an uphill battle. Still, Hawaiian Electric officials remain committed to the proposal.
鈥淲e have to do what we think is best for our customers,鈥 Oshima said.
Hawaiian Electric and Fortis officials had met with the governor before last month鈥檚 liquefied natural gas announcement, but were unable to change his mind, Oshima said, adding that he鈥檚 hoping this new proposal聽alleviates some of Ige’s聽earlier concerns, including safety.
Oshima said Ige was worried about how the gas would get to the power plants. Under the latest proposal, the company would use International Standards Organization containers that Oshima said are safer than anything already being trucked around the islands.
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About the Author
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Nathan Eagle is a deputy editor for Civil Beat. You can reach him by email at neagle@civilbeat.org or follow him on Twitter at , Facebook and Instagram .