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Date:Thu, 3 May 2001 02:00:00 -0700 (PDT)

Saudi To Announce Gas Proj Winners In Next Two Wks-Report
Dow Jones, 05/03/01

Missing link
The Daily Deal, 05/03/01

World Bond Markets: Healthy Supply Boosts Activity In Eurobond Market ---
General Motors Acceptance, International Finance Launch
Dow Jones Newswires, 05/03/01

REVIEW & OUTLOOK (Editorial) Power, Pricing and Politics
The Asian Wall Street Journal, 05/03/01

INDIA: Foreign funds plough money into Indian shares
Reuters, 05/03/01

India: Parties up the ante for probe into Enron deal
The Hindu, 05/03/01

India: Handle Enron cautiously: Deshmukh
The Hindu, 05/03/01

India: Promoters holding parleys on future course of action
Business Line (The Hindu), 05/03/01

India: Bank of America to invest $50 m more in India
Business Line (The Hindu), 05/03/01
India: Renegotiation with Enron likely, says Deshmukh
Business Line (The Hindu), 05/03/01
Let Enron Exit
The Times of India, 05/03/01

IDBI: whose life is it, anyway?
Business Standard, 05/03/01
UK names coastal zones
Lloyd's List International, 05/03/01
UK: Emetra delays derivatives, to focus on physicals
Reuters, 05/03/01
Scottish Power Earnings Fall But US Strategy On Track
Dow Jones, 05/03/01
Scottish Power CEO: Hunter Plant Fully On Line
Dow Jones, 05/03/01
UK: UPDATE 3-Scottish Power restructures as profits slip
Reuters, 05/03/01
Distractions interfere with key growth questions
Financial Times, 05/03/01
USA: UPDATE 2-Calpine, Kinder Morgan plan N.M.-Calif. natgas line.
Reuters, 05/02/01
USA: Enron says vice chairman Clifford Baxter resigns
Reuters, 05/02/01
Enron Vice Chairman Cliff Baxter Resigns
PR Newswire, 05/02/01
PARDON ME WHILE I SCREAM IN THE DARK
The Press Democrat, 05/02/01
LNG carriage to be preserve of India-flag ships
Lloyd's List International, 05/02/01
SCOTTISHPOWER REPORTEDLY TRYING TO PURCHASE PGE
Portland Oregonian, 05/02/01
SCI ups profile with Petronet deal
Lloyd's List International, 05/02/01
CALIFORNIA GENERATORS REPORT RECORD PROFITS THAT DWARF FERC'S LATEST REFUND
ORDERS
Foster Electric Report, 05/02/01




Saudi To Announce Gas Proj Winners In Next Two Wks-Report

05/03/2001
Dow Jones Energy Service
(Copyright © 2001, Dow Jones & Company, Inc.)

DUBAI -(Dow Jones)- Saudi Arabia will announce the names of international oil
companies which have been awarded a role in the kingdom's three core gas
ventures in the next two weeks, a Saudi official said in published remarks
Thursday.
The Arabic daily Al Watan quoted Abdulrahman Al-Sahibani, a member of the
Saudi negotiating committee which has been consulting with IOCs on the
projects, as saying that a Saudi ministerial committee had made its
recommendations to the country's Supreme Petroleum Council about 10 days ago
and that the SPC will now make the final selection.
Al-Sahibani said the ministerial committee didn't recommend some of the IOCs
originally shortlisted to the SPC. He wouldn't elaborate.
The 11 companies shortlisted last year for consideration are Royal
Dutch/Shell Group (RD), BP PLC (BP), Exxon Mobil (XOM), Chevron (CHV),
TotalFinaElf (TOT), ENI SpA (E), Enron Corp. (ENE) and Occidental Petroleum
Corp. (OXY) who are bidding jointly, Marathon Oil Canada Inc. (T.M), Conoco
Inc. (COCA) and Phillips Petroleum (P).
The three ventures on offer have been estimated at a combined value of about
$25 billion.
Saudi Arabia invited international oil companies in October 1998 to
participate in proposals for downstream gas projects and upstream gas
enhancement.
-By Dyala Sabbagh, Dow Jones Newswires; 9714 3314260;
dyala.sabbagh@dowjones.com



Post Mortem
Missing link
by Claire Poole

05/03/2001
The Daily Deal
Copyright © 2001 The Deal LLC

Buying Illinova gave Dynegy a key piece in a puzzle for trading energy
anywhere, anytime.
When Chuck Watson decided to take his company beyond natural gas trading, he
changed its name to Dynegy Inc. and took as its logo a tangram, a seven-piece
puzzle that can be assembled in thousands of ways. Buying utility Illinova
Corp. in February 2000, gave him a piece for delivering such flexibility.
"The Illinova acquisition was probably the most well-timed and best conceived
buy of the year," raves Jeremy Butler, an analyst at Value Line Publishing
Inc.
ReportCard
DYNEGY -- ILLINOVA
Stock Price A
Profitability B+
Strategy A-
Braintrust B
Culture B
Competitive Position A
Overall A-
Why? Besides providing electricity to 650,000 customers in a
15,000-square-mile area in Illinois, Decatur, Ill.-based Illinova also had
recently received regulatory approval to transfer its coal and gas-fired
generating plants -- 3,800 megawatts in all -- to an unregulated subsidiary
as part of the state's deregulation of its electricity industry.
Thanks to soaring energy prices, as well as to $125 million to $165 million
in overall earnings estimated or achieved from optimizing Illinova's
generation assets and improving its operating efficiencies, Dynegy is seeing
the effects of the deal on its bottom line. "Illinova has been extremely
accretive to earnings," said M. Carol Coale, an analyst at Prudential
Securities in Houston.
Last year, in fact, Dynegy's revenues nearly doubled to $29.4 billion, while
its net earnings almost tripled to $452 million, or $1.43 per diluted share,
as a result of the $4 billion Illinova deal. In the first quarter, Dynegy's
net earnings jumped 73%.
Investors have been amply rewarded. Dynegy's stock took off last year,
jumping 135% to $56.06 per share, making it the second best performing stock
in the Standard & Poor's 500. Since the Illinova deal was announced June 14,
1999, Dynegy's stock has skyrocketed an astounding 207%, from $18.25 to
$56.11. (One of those happy investors is San Francisco-based oil and gas
giant Chevron Corp., which owns about 27% of Dynegy.)
For Watson, who formed Dynegy in the late 1990s out of Houston energy company
NGS Corp., where he was CEO and chairman, the success of the Illinova deal
underscores his quest to take power and trade it anywhere he wants, anytime
he wants, at any price he wants. That's why he dubbed the company Dynegy, a
hybrid name taken by combining "dynamic" with "energy."
If energy prices stay high and Dynegy's traders continue to make winning
bets, analysts expect the company's net earnings per share to increase
another 25% this year to $575 million, or $1.80 per share. But Dynegy hasn't
been immune to the power crisis afflicting California, where it co-owns four
power plants with NRG Energy Inc. of Minneapolis that generate 2,800
megawatts of capacity.
Indeed, since the crisis began, Dynegy's been defending itself against
allegations that it's overcharging for power.
The California situation has hurt Dynegy in other ways, too. On April 6, for
example, its stock fell 5%, to $48.34, after utility Pacific Gas & Electric
Co., a unit of PG&E Corp., filed for bankruptcy. (Dynegy provides power to
the California market as a wholesaler but not to PG&E directly.)
Dynegy has also been quibbling recently with another teetering California
utility, Sempra Energy's San Diego Gas & Electric, which claimed April 12
that Dynegy ordered it to shutter some of the facilities the utility sold it
in 1999 -- but that it still operates -- because it doesn't think it will get
paid.
Dynegy denied the charge. "Dynegy did not instruct SDG&E to shut down
generating units, nor did we suggest that we would not make power available
to creditworthy buyers," Stephen W. Bergstrom, Dynegy's president and COO,
wrote in a letter to SDG&E Chairman and CEO Stephen Baum.
Dynegy has tried to downplay its exposure to the state's power woes. It's
repeatedly pointed out to the press that its 50% stake in the four power
plants in California only represents 1,400 of its total generating portfolio
of 13,000 megawatts, or about 10.8%. Analysts, however, estimate Dynegy's
exposure in California could give its earnings a haircut of as much as 15%
this year.
Even so, Dynegy's stock has recovered to a recent $56. "Illinova has created
some volatility to Dynegy's stock because of the addition of power generation
to its business," Prudential's Coale said. "But overall, it's been a great
deal."
While keeping most of Illinova management in place, Dynegy made the company's
chairman, president and CEO, Charles Bayless, a nonexecutive director of the
combined entity. Dynegy's also marketing and trading all of Illinova's 3,800
megawatts of output. "They've streamlined power generation and traded around
the assets while keeping the distribution business in a sweet spot," said
John Olson, an analyst at Sanders Morris Harris in Houston.
Illinova, meanwhile, solved a big investor-related problem for Dynegy. Before
the merger, only 10% of Dynegy's shares were available to the public. As part
of the deal, Watson convinced two of Dynegy's strategic partners, British Gas
plc and Nova Chemicals, to sell their combined 50% stake for approximately
$542 million in cash and 3,348,888 shares of a new convertible preferred
stock. It also issued 3.3 million shares after the deal closed.
Those moves increased Dynegy's float to more than 60% of the shares
outstanding, which led money managers to flood in. The company's market
capitalization has since tripled to $18.3 billion.
Operationally, in its effort to focus on power generation, trading and
marketing, Dynegy has been dumping some of its mid-stream assets, such as
processing plants and pipelines, particularly in the mid-Continent region.
The idea now is to increase Dynegy's so-called merchant power capacity -- or
the electricity it sells wholesale to anyone who needs it -- to 70,000
megawatts by 2004 through acquisitions, new construction and asset management
agreements.
As a result, Watson has become what some are calling "an acquisitions hound."
He's already acquired some facilities. On Jan. 31, Dynegy completed the
purchase of two power plants in the Hudson River Valley -- the 1,200-megawatt
Roseton power plant in Newburgh, N.Y., and the 500-megawatt Danskammer plant
nearby -- from various area utilities for $376 million. Banc of America
Securities llc advised Dynegy on both purchases.
Dynegy has had trouble picking up other power plants, however. Witness the
deal it announced Nov. 20 to acquire 1,330 megawatts worth of
electricity-generating assets in Nevada from Reno-based Sierra Pacific
Resources for $634 million. The deal got scotched April 18 when Nevada
regulators -- spooked by its next-door neighbor's power crisis -- repealed
the state's electricity deregulation plan and put a moratorium on all power
plant sales in the state. (Dynegy estimated the acquisition would have added
5 cents per share to 2001 earnings.)
Still, since the Illinova merger, the total generating capacity built or
acquired by Dynegy now exceeds the total capacity added through the merger.
That includes 1,160 megawatts of new natural gas-fired generation facilities
in Georgia, Kentucky and Louisiana that are expected to begin commercial
operation by June -- just in time for summer.
Like its cross-town rival, Enron Corp., Dynegy has also expanded via
acquisitions into broadband telecommunications. (Dynegy also competes with
Houston-based Reliant Energy and Charlotte, N.C.-based Duke Energy.)
Both Enron and Dynegy see a big opportunity in broadband, given that there
are few other suppliers and that managing its movement is akin to what's
involved with natural gas or electricity.
In August, Dynegy announced it was acquiring Aurora, Colo.-based Extant Inc.,
a privately held developer of telecom solutions, for $188 million in cash and
stock. It completed the deal in September. Then in November, Dynegy announced
it was acquiring privately held Iaxis Ltd., a London-based telecom that owned
and operated an 8,750-mile fiber-optic network throughout Europe, for almost
$200 million. Dynegy completed the deal in March.
Dynegy is now developing a 20,000-mile fiber-optic cable network in the U.S.
that it will link to Iaxis' network in Europe. It hopes its broadband unit,
which lost $11.6 million in the first quarter, will be profitable by the
second half of 2002.
Still, Dynegy has differentiated itself as the "anti-Enron" because, among
other things, it continues to buy power plants rather than sell them. (Enron,
meanwhile, has been trying to dump its hard assets, such as Portland General
Electric in Portland, Ore.)
Enron CEO Jeff Skilling -- a polished former McKinsey & Co. consultant --
just wants to be a go-between, and not just in energy, but in broadband, pulp
and paper and metals, while Dynegy's Watson -- a scrappy former commodities
trader -- thinks he can play power generation and trading off each other.
It'll be interesting to see who is right.
Looking back at the Illinova deal Dynegy Inc.'s acquisition of Illinova Corp.
has proven one of the best deals of the year.
Company Dynegy Inc.
President Charles L. (Chuck) Watson
Headquarters Houston
Market cap $13.6 billion*
Date Action
1/03/00 Federal regulators
http://www.thedeal.com/cgi-bin/gx.cgi/AppLogic%2BFTContentServer?pagename=Futu
reTense/Apps/Xcelerate/Render&c=TDDArticle&cid=A12621-2000Jan3&preview=true
for Dynegy Inc. and Illinova Corp. to complete their $2 billion merger
1/06/00 Dynegy has to say in a release that the
http://www.thedeal.com/cgi-bin/gx.cgi/AppLogic%2BFTContentServer?pagename=Futu
reTense/Apps/Xcelerate/Render&c=TDDArticle&cid=A12891-2000Jan6&preview=true.
Late in December the companies said the deal's completion, scheduled for Jan.
4, would be postponed until mid-January because of a delay in Dynegy's sale
of assets to El Paso Energy Corp.
1/14/00 Watson is betting that he can succeed where Enron failed: by
http://www.thedeal.com/cgi-bin/gx.cgi/AppLogic%2BFTContentServer?pagename=Futu
reTense/Apps/Xcelerate/Render&c=TDDArticle&cid=A13445-2000Jan14&preview=true
to boost the fortunes of its lucrative energy trading business
2/02/00 Dynegy, Illinova complete merger, creating a new entity named Dynegy
Inc. Shareholders in the previous Dynegy Inc. receive 0.69 shares in the new
company, or $16.50 cash, for each of their shares, while Illinova
stockholders receive one share for each of their shares.
* Figure from 5/02/01 Source: The Deal
Back to story
http://www.thedeal.com




World Bond Markets: Healthy Supply Boosts Activity In Eurobond Market ---
General Motors Acceptance, International Finance Launch
Dow Jones Newswires

05/03/2001
The Asian Wall Street Journal
M9
(Copyright © 2001, Dow Jones & Company, Inc.)

LONDON -- Activity in the primary Eurobond market picked up early Wednesday
amid a growing pipeline of supply, with a $500 million issue of five-year
bonds by General Motors Acceptance Corp. and a $300 million 10-year issue by
International Finance Corp.
The market also was awaiting the landmark GBP 2 billion ($3.2 billion)
equivalent asset-backed issue from Glas Cymru, due to launch via Royal Bank
of Scotland and Schroder Salomon Smith Barney, dealers said.
The deal will fund Glas Cymru's acquisition of Welsh Water from WPD and was
expected to come in slightly tighter than original talk for triple-A tranches
of between 110 and 120 basis points, or hundredths of a percentage points,
over U.K. government bonds.
Elsewhere, Finance for Danish Industry, rated A1, was set to issue 600
million euros ($535.7 million) of four-year bonds via Deutsche Bank, ABN Amro
and BNP Paribas. Energy group Innogy PLC also was expected to tap the market
again Wednesday with a 500-million-euro seven-year issue, expected at a
spread of 110 basis points over midmarket swaps.
Meanwhile, Finland has mandated ABN Amro, Deutsche Bank and Nordea to joint
lead manage the issue of a syndicated government bond due 2007, ABN Amro
said. According to market speculation, the size is around three billion
euros.
Energy group Enron has mandated Schroder Salomon Smith Barney as bookrunner
for a multicurrency credit-linked notes trust transaction, consisting of
tranches in intermediate maturities. Launch will follow a European roadshow,
subject to market conditions, and UBS Warburg is joint lead manager.
Secondary market activity was once again dominated by the telecommunications
sector, where British Telecommunications bonds were between 10 and 15 basis
points tighter on news that it will sell its stakes in Japan Telecom, the
J-Phone Group and Airtel to Vodafone for GBP 4.8 billion in cash, reducing
its debt burden by GBP 4.4 billion.
"This is undoubtedly positive news for BT bond holders," HSBC said in a
research note.




REVIEW & OUTLOOK (Editorial)
Power, Pricing and Politics

05/03/2001
The Asian Wall Street Journal
7
(Copyright © 2001, Dow Jones & Company, Inc.)

India's electricity shortage can't be solved without a new approach.
India's power problem is back on the front burner because global generating
giant Enron is threatening to turn off the lights at its Dhabol plant and
walk away from a contract with the Maharashtra State Electricity Board. In an
effort to collect $48 million owed for electricity already supplied, the
American company has invoked central government guarantees and declared a
political force majeure, but without much success. So technically India is
facing a sovereign default, after which Enron would spend years battling
through the courts to get compensation for the $3 billion project. Of course
everyone knows that's not going to happen. After more brinksmanship from both
sides, in the coming days they will have to sit down and negotiate a
settlement.
Some of the problems with Enron are unique to that particular arrangement,
but in its basic outline the saga epitomizes a flawed attempt to deal with
India's power problem, narrowly defined: a shortage of generating capacity.
The country suffers constant blackouts due to a supply shortage of about 6%,
and even more during times of peak demand. In the early 1990s, the central
government sought to solve this shortfall by opening the doors to private
investors like Enron.
But this proved to be a mistake because power distribution is controlled by
the state governments -- they run it as a system of wealth redistribution
rather than a business. California recently made the earth-shattering
discovery that a lack of market pricing at the consumer level leads to
disaster. But India's state electricity boards, or SEBs, proved that long
ago; they have long been bankrupt, and often default on payments to private
generators. As a result, most of the big names in power have now pulled out
of India.
Yes, the country does need to worry about generating capacity. It's estimated
that in the next 12 years demand will more than double, with an additional
100,000 megawatts needed, but only half of that is likely to be built. That
could increase the shortfall during peak demand to 24%, a frightening
prospect. But the first order of business is to reform distribution.
There is a debate now about how to give state governments the right
incentives to reform their SEBs. These owe almost $6 billion to central
government-owned generators and mines, from whom they buy much of their power
and coal. In the recently passed budget, New Delhi included a provision to
forgive this debt as long as the state governments commit to either
privatizing their SEBs or putting a floor on electricity prices. Electricity
meters would actually be installed to measure power usage, but subsidies
would still be allowed; many customers wouldn't pay enough to cover the true
cost of that power.
Still, this would be big progress by Indian standards if it happened. Many
farmers currently get their power for free, and over 30% of power generated
is stolen -- something the SEBs euphemistically call "transmission and
distribution losses." As a result, the electricity boards average a return on
investment of negative 18%.
However, New Delhi is offering quite a big carrot and not much stick. After a
March 3 meeting between the prime minister and state leaders, Rajnath Singh,
the chief minister of Uttar Pradesh, said quite clearly that he wouldn't hike
energy charges for farmers. The reason is obvious -- he faces elections next
year, and free power has become an entitlement that no politician lightly
takes away. Chief ministers will likely sign on to New Delhi's plan in order
to get debt relief, but will backslide on implementation.
The only thing that will make the states serious about reform is a hard
budget constraint, which is the opposite of what the government is offering.
One way to provide it would be to hand over the centrally owned power
generators and mines to the states. They would then have to figure out how to
keep the system running. If they still chose not to charge for electricity,
they would have to find the money for power generation from other parts of
their budgets.
Another reform some have suggested is to pass a national law which legalizes
private power producers. Some states allow companies to have their own
"captive" power plants to maintain supply when the public grid fails. But
these are typically not permitted to sell their power outside of the parent
company. If larger plants that could supply several industrial firms were
legalized, the states would come under greater pressure to reform. The
private power suppliers could cherry-pick the best customers, those willing
to pay for reliable power, leaving the state to subsidize the freeloaders.
This would also have the benefit of quickly boosting the country's power
supply, since captive plants already have about 10,000 megawatts of unused
capacity.
New Delhi is still trying to reform the country's power market by fiat. This
means years of political wrangling while a growing economy is strangled by a
shortage of electricity. Instead, the would-be reformers could let the power
of the invisible hand push the state governments in the right direction.




INDIA: Foreign funds plough money into Indian shares.
By Anurag Sood

05/03/2001
Reuters English News Service
(C) Reuters Limited 2001.

BOMBAY, May 3 (Reuters) - A stock market scandal, the high-flying software
sector skidding to a slowdown, a faltering industrial growth and fears
India's biggest foreign investor might pull out.
These are some of the events that shook Indian investors, regulators and
legislators in the first four months of 2001.
Yet foreign funds with deep pockets seem undeterred and have pumped money
into emerging Asia's third biggest stock market by market capitalisation.
Official data show foreign institutional investors were net buyers in Indian
shares of $340 million in April, boosting the January-April tally to $1.98
billion - exceeding the $1.53 billion in the whole of 2000.
"There has been a higher allocation to Asia this year, part of which has
found its way into India," said Singapore-based Samir Arora, head of Asian
Emerging Markets at Alliance Capital.
He said these were funds deserting the United States on fears of a slowdown
and losses on Wall Street, but afraid to get into crisis-ridden Japan, and
hence hunting for better returns in emerging Asia.
According to Lipper Asia Ltd, a Reuters global funds data company,
investments by the 20 biggest fund investors in Asia soared to $615.8 billion
in the January-March period, up from $354.3 billion in the same quarter last
year.
But the country's stock market this year has been among the worst performers
in the region. The Bombay benchmark index is down 10.92 percent since the
start of January, only ahead of Indonesia.
THE BUY LIST
The shopping cart shows pickings this year have been widespread, from
technology where fund managers say valuations were attractive after the
meltdown, to the old industrial firms they feel could ride the wave of a
turnaround.
The Indian economy, number two in developing Asia by gross domestic product,
is seen growing close by an average six percent - the IMF estimates 5.6
percent, the Asian Development Bank 6.2 percent and the Indian central bank
6.0-6.5 percent.
Ajit Ranade, economist at ABN AMRO Bank, says India's large domestic economy,
resilient to the global slowdown, could pull more funds into the country.
But a blizzard of stock market scandals which revealed share price
manipulation has unnerved some foreign investors.
"Weak regulation is a part of an emerging market risk, but that does not rule
out caution," said an India strategist at a foreign brokerage.
Analysts say foreign fund flows are unlikely to be influenced much by events
such as the Enron controversy, where the U.S. energy giant is threatening to
pull out of its $2.9 billion power project in the western Indian state of
Maharashtra.
Enron is India's single biggest foreign direct investor.
They say factors that influence foreign portfolio investments are different
from the considerations that drive longer term direct investments.
The Indian government's decision to hike foreign funds' investment limit in
Indian firms to 49 percent has also added to fresh buying in Indian software
services firms.
"India's technology sector is still the best in the region. It has got low
capital expenditure, no inventory, and increasingly their customers are
outside the technology sector, in areas like banking, insurance and other
industrial sectors," Arora of Alliance Capital said.



India: Parties up the ante for probe into Enron deal
Mahesh Vijapurkar

05/03/2001
The Hindu
Copyright (C) 2001 Kasturi & Sons Ltd (KSL); Source: World Reporter (TM) -
Asia Intelligence Wire

MUMBAI, MAY 2. All left-of-centre political parties, either partners in the
coalition or supportive of the Democratic Front Government, today thrashed
its effort to renegotiate the power purchase agreement (PPA) with the Enron
-sponsored Dabhol Power Company. The least- cost option was to initiate a
judicial probe into the deal, which was replete with fraud, and seek the
scrapping of the project, they said.
This view was made public after the parties - Peasants and Workers Party, the
CPI(M), the Janata Dal (Secular), the Samajwadi Party and others - met here
and decided to press the demand at a meeting of the coordination committee of
all parties, including the Congress and the Nationalist Congress Party, on
May 8. Its scheduled meeting for today was put off as the Chief Minister, Mr.
Vilasrao Deshmukh, was away electioneering in the South.
These parties, worried about the huge, unpayable DPC bills, had been
demanding a probe under the Inquiries Commissions Act but today upped the
ante, saying "we are convinced of fraud" in the agreement with DPC. "The
renegotiation," Mr. N. D. Patil, who leads the Left grouping and heads the
all-party coordination panel said, "is not what we want... we don't want it
at all." He and Mr. Prabhakar Sanzgiri, CPI(M), said "we no longer suspect
it. We are convinced" of malfeasance.
Along with Mr. Pradhyumna Kaul of the Anti-Enron Campaign, they told a press
conference that the moment fraud was proved, the PPA could be annulled and
"the huge liquidation penalties can be avoided."
The demand was to scrap the 1,444 mw phase II, "take over" the 740 mw Phase I
and initiate a probe. "The Godbole Committee (report) has provided enough
grounds," though Phase I "was a reality and Phase II only an eventuality."
Even a small criminal probe would put any arbitration decision, sought by the
DPC, "on hold."
The lobby pressing for scrapping the PPA said an FIR against the Maharashtra
State Electricity Board, under the provisions of Section 10 of the
Electricity Supply Act, would suffice as there were enough grounds to prove
that the entity or persons concerned had 'played games' at one time or the
other. It cited bloated projections of energy demand in Maharashtra, provided
by the MSEB to DPC, to justify the work on the Phase II which is now under
stress following lenders' reluctance to provide funds till the issue is
sorted out.
When asked why Mr. Deshmukh preferred renegotiation and trimming of power
tariff to a probe, Mr. Patil said "that is his view." For their part, the
parties "would press for change at the meeting on May 8... We are not witch
hunting. There have been fraudulent acts and we want them probed."


India: Handle Enron cautiously: Deshmukh
Our Special Correspondent

05/03/2001
The Hindu
Copyright (C) 2001 Kasturi & Sons Ltd (KSL); Source: World Reporter (TM) -
Asia Intelligence Wire

THIRUVANANTHAPURAM, MAY 2. The Maharashtra Chief Minister, Mr. Vilasrao
Deshmukh, today advised the State to handle the Enron issue cautiously and
refrain from committing the mistakes made by his State.
Addressing a press conference here today, Mr. Deshmukh said the Maharashtra
Government was treading carefully on the Enron issue and it hoped to
renegotiate the power tariff with the U.S. company.
Mr. Deshmukh's observations assume significance in the context of the running
controversy regarding the Kannur Power Project, which had been denied
permission by the LDF Government.
Mr. Deshmukh said that Enron had written to the Maharashtra State Electricity
Board that it was ready to renegotiate the power tariff provided the
Government of India made a formal request. He said the renegotiation would
start as soon as the Union Government handed over the formal letter asking
for a renegotiation.
Mr. Deshmukh pointed out that the basic issue in Enron's Dabhol project was
related to the power tariff. The foreign exchange rate was fixed at Rs. 32 a
dollar at the start of the project. But now, it had gone up to Rs. 47 a
dollar, thereby pushing the cost of power up. He indicated that the
renegotiations would focus on this aspect as well.
The Maharashtra Government had proposed renegotiation on the basis of the
Godbole Commission recommendation. He was confident that the Enron would
agree to renegotiate the tariff in the interests of the Maharashtra
Government and its own interests.
In reply to a question, Mr. Deshmukh said the Enron project had been a major
drain on his State's finances, but it had overcome all problems by handling
them very carefully.
He said the Maharashtra Government would extend all support to the UDF if it
were to come to power to process the various parameters relating to the
Kannur project so that it did not commit the same kind of mistake as
Maharashtra did. He, however, made it clear that his Government welcomed
foreign direct investments but not at the cost of the State's interests.
Mr. Deshmukh attacked the Centre for not using the various options available
under the WTO agreement to come out with a balanced import-export policy.
Asked for his comments on Mr. Sharad Pawar's statement that the NCP was
considering joining the People's Front, Mr. Deshmukh made it very clear that
his party's alliance with the NCP was confined to Maharashtra alone. 'The
alliance with the NCP is a post- election affair as part of the attempts to
unite all secular forces. The Congress had fought the NCP and several other
parties which are now part of the Congress-led Government. But the alliance
had been formed in order to keep the BJP-Shiv Sena combine out,' he said.
Asked how his party could accept the NCP which had an alliance going with the
BJP in Meghalaya, Mr. Deshmukh said the Congress- NCP ties were confined to
Maharashtra. 'If the NCP creates any problems in Maharashtra, the alliance
would end,' he said.
Mr. Deshmukh attacked the CPI(M)-led LDF for its five- year misrule which had
left the State virtually bankrupt. 'The credibility of the LDF is so low that
the people would not vote for it.' The CPI(M)-led Left parties would be
defeated in Kerala and West Bengal, he added.


?
India: Promoters holding parleys on future course of action

05/03/2001
Business Line (The Hindu)
Copyright (C) 2001 Kasturi & Sons Ltd (KSL); Source: World Reporter (TM) -
Asia Intelligence Wire
NEW DELHI, May 2. THE Shipping Corporation of India, Mitsui O.S.K. Lines,
Atlantic Commercial Inc (an Enron affiliate) are holding parleys at Houston,
US, the headquarters of Enron Inc,to decide the future course of action on
its LNG shipping deal for the Dabhol Power Company (DPC).
The controversy surrounding the Enron-promoted DPC and the apprehension
raised by the lenders to the LNG shipping project has made the three shipping
promoters of Greenfield Shipping Company take stock of the situation.
"A final view on the LNG shipping deal will depend on what Enron decides on
the power project per se and not just the second phase of the project which
is being planned as a LNG- driven plant. Even the first phase is expected to
switch-over to LNG in a couple of years", sources tracking the sequence of
events told Business Line.
The promoters have already paid 70 per cent of the vessel building cost to
Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, Japan, where the 135,000-cubic metre capacity
vessel is being constructed at a total cost of $ 224 million.
According to the delivery schedule, the LNG vessel named Laxmi is expected to
be completed and delivered by October end this year.
A consortium of 11 global banks led by ANZ Investment Bank has taken a high
exposure on the LNG shipping project. The Greenfield Shipping Company had
struck a 10-year loan with the lenders worth $ 165 million at 325 basis
points over libor.
SCI has a 20 per cent equity stake in the project while Mitsui O.S.K.Lines
hold 60 per cent and Atlantic Commercial Inc. 20 per cent. The LNG shipping
deal for Dabhol was the first LNG shipping contract in the country involving
an Indian shipping line.
Greenfield Shipping Company had entered into a time- charter agreement with
DPC to transport LNG from West Asia to its power plant in Maharashtra at a
time-charter hire rate of $ 98,600 per day for 20 years.
Unlike in the case of other ships, LNG ships do not have a secondary market
since these are acquired against specific long-term contracts.
In case of any eventuality, Greenfield Shipping Company would find it
difficult to divert the vessel elsewhere as globally spot trade in LNG is
almost nil.
Fortunately for the Greenfield Shipping Company, the prices for new LNG
buildings have started "firming up" after travelling through a downward trend
till recently.
Mitsui O.S.K.Lines-NYKK Line-KKK Line-SCI consortium which recently bagged
the shipping contract from Petronet LNG Ltd also, has placed an order with
Daewoo Shipbuilding Yard to construct two LNG tankers of 1,38,000 cubic metre
capacity each at $ 185 million per vessel.
This phase witnessed LNG building prices go down substantially, but has since
started picking up.
Our Bureau


India: Bank of America to invest $50 m more in India

05/03/2001
Business Line (The Hindu)
Copyright (C) 2001 Kasturi & Sons Ltd (KSL); Source: World Reporter (TM) -
Asia Intelligence Wire

MUMBAI, May 2. BANK of America plans to invest around $50 million (Rs 235
crore) to expand its business in India in the next two years, according to Mr
Viswavir Ahuja, who took over as Country Manager of the bank in India from
May 1.
"We have already obtained FIPB and RBI clearance and the first installment of
$10.5 million will be brought in shortly," Mr Ahuja said.
The bank is setting up a 100 per cent subsidiary - Banc of America Securities
Pvt Ltd - for undertaking primary dealership in Government securities and
dealing in other debt products.
In a chat with presspersons here on Wednesday, Mr Ahuja said in terms of
strategy, "the bank intends to favour judicious balance sheet usage while
increasing trading and distribution and advisory capabilities."
Bank of America, which exited from retail banking a couple of years ago, is
now focussing on the wholesale segment. It would open a new branch in
Bangalore, the fifth in the country, in the third-quarter.
The bank has an exposure in power, telecom and other segments of the
infrastructure sector. Bank of America is among the foreign lenders to the
Enron's Dhabol Power Project.
Our Bureau


India: Renegotiation with Enron likely, says Deshmukh

05/03/2001
Business Line (The Hindu)
Copyright (C) 2001 Kasturi & Sons Ltd (KSL); Source: World Reporter (TM) -
Asia Intelligence Wire

THIRUVANANTHAPURAM, May 2. THOUGH it continues to be a major embarrassment
and a heavy draw on its finances, the Enron issue seems to have armed the
Maharashtra Government with enough "expertise" to advise on similar projects
elsewhere in the country.
This was one of the upshots at the news conference by the Maharashtra Chief
Minister, Mr Vilasrao Deshmukh, who is on an election campaign on behalf of
the United Democratic Front (UDF), here on Wednesday.
In the course of his interaction with the newspersons, he said his Government
would extend all support to UDF, if it came to power, to process the various
parameters relating to the Kannur project so that it did not commit the same
kind of mistakes such as Maharashtra.
He, however, made it clear that his Government would welcome foreign direct
investments, but not at the cost of the State's interests.
Mr Deshmukh said the Maharashtra Government was hopeful of renegotiating the
issue of tariff for the power from Dhabol project with Enron.
He said Enron had written to the Maharashtra State Electricity Board (MSEB)
that it was ready to renegotiate power tariff provided the Union Government
made a formal request.
The renegotiation would begin as soon as the Union Government handed over the
formal letter in this regard, he added.
The Chief Minister said the basic issue was related to the power tariff.
The foreign exchange component was fixed at Rs 32 per dollar at the start of
the project, which had now gone up to Rs 47 per dollar thereby pushing up the
cost of power. He indicated that the renegotiations would focus on this
aspect as well.
He explained that the Maharashtra Government had proposed renegotiation on
the basis of Godbole Commission recommendation. He was confident that Enron
would agree to renegotiate the tariff in its own interest as well as that of
the State Government.
Our Bureau


Let Enron Exit
ADITYA CHATTERJEE & POOJA KOTHARI

05/03/2001
The Times of India
Copyright (C) 2001 The Times of India; Source: World Reporter (TM)
FOR years, Enron tried to woo Indian policy-makers, who couldn't seem to
decide whether the Dabhol project was a good idea or not. Today, the boot is
on the other foot, and it seems to be pinching. Enron's management is keen to
stop investing in huge, capital-intensive plants around the world. In keeping
with this strategy -and no doubt exhausted by its ceaseless crisis management
in India - Enron is mulling a pullout. But both the Centre and Maharashtra
government want to renegotiate the power purchase agreement and have
entrusted this responsibility to the Madhav Godbole panel.
Is Enron really as indispensable as the authorities seem to think it is?
Financially, no. Indeed, if the only way to continue the project is on the
present terms, then it makes better sense to simply scrap it. After all, it's
better to amputate a gangrenous limb than to let the problem spread further.
A little arithmetic will make this amply clear. If the Dabhol Power Company
(DPC) does scrap its agreement with the Maharashtra State Electricity Board,
the Centre will have to cough up a sum of Rs 2,910 crore - a penalty amount
of Rs 1,500 crore for one year's electricity bill, and $300 million as
termination fees (which works out to Rs 1,410 crore at an assumed exchange
rate of 47 rupees to one dollar). This is a one-time payment, and the figure
of Rs 2,910 crore is corroborated by a recent statement by Union power
secretary A K Basu.
Now, if India were to continue with the present arrangement, it would end up
paying at least Rs 1,500 crore per year for the next 10 years to DPC. On the
other hand, what would happen if the project were scrapped? Well, very
simplistically, India would save Rs 15,000 crore (Rs 1,500 crore multiplied
by 10 years). But things aren't quite that simple, because that money could
earn interest, while inflation would mean that Rs 15,000 crore after 10 years
would not have the same value it would have today. To get around this
problem, financial experts use a concept called net present value, which
discounts future earning streams as well as inflation, to evaluate the
attractiveness of a project. If we use a discount rate of 10 per cent, then
the value of the amount India would save by scrapping the Dabhol project
works out to Rs 9,217 crore, over three times the amount India would have to
pay today if the agreement with DPC is terminated.
Indian financial institutions (FIs) and banks which have lent money to DPC
are actively lobbying to prevent such an eventuality. But how badly would
they be hit? Well, FIs led by Industrial Development Bank of India have
provided loans of $95 million and $333 million in two phases. This brings
their total exposure to $428 million (Rs 2,012 crore at an exchange rate of
47/$). Besides, State Bank of India also underwrote the maximum portion of a
$557 million cross-border loan, and has an exposure of about $175 million (Rs
823 crore). Thus, the cumulative exposure of Indian banks and FIs in DPC
works out to around Rs 2,835 crore.
However, since only 80 per cent of this amount has been disbursed so far, the
net exposure of Indian lenders amounts to Rs 2,268 crore. Since the Indian
lenders are not covered by any counter-guarantee, their bottomline would be
hit if Enron backs out. The government, being a majority stakeholder in most
of these institutions, would also be affected. But even if all these loans
are taken into account and added to the one-time payment of Rs 2,910 crore,
the total cost to the government would be Rs 5,178 crore - still lower than
Rs 9,217 crore.
Thus, the termination option will prove less costly for the nation than
proceeding on the present terms. What will happen to the assets and the
plant, did we hear you ask? Well, the government can sell it to private
players and re-negotiate the cost factor with them - this time hopefully
after doing a cost-benefit analysis! A sale of assets would also lessen the
load on the government. Who knows, the government may actually manage to sell
the ownership of DPC at a premium to another private sector player!
Of course, fears have been raised that cancelling the project might cost us
foreign direct investment since Enron is the biggest investor in India so
far. After all, Brazil raised $31 billion and China $49 billion last year in
comparison with India's measly $4 billion. But there's another way of looking
at the problem - what does India really have to lose? In short, it's a case
of losing what you don't even have in the first place.
Many developing nations which were pushed into signing expensive power
projects by multinationals have successfully re-negotiated their contracts
with no serious financial consequences. Many nations simply did not have the
money to pay for the inflated bills, some refused to pay even after losing
international arbitration awards, while others like Costa Rica declared that
the 15 contracts signed with independent power producers (like Enron) have no
legal status or are bad in law.
In July 1999, the Hungarian parliament declared that a PPA signed with
multinational RWE was unconstitutional and void. In August 2000, the Croatian
government tore up a PPA signed between Enron and a previous government. The
contract was considered to be unaffordable, and was allegedly signed in
suspicious circumstances. Enron subsequently abandoned the original
agreement. In September 2000, the Philippines took a decision to not renew
financially crippling contracts with IPPs.
Controversy has accompanied the Dabhol project from the start. In August
1994, the finance ministry had written to the power ministry that the size of
"the potential liability for a 1,000 megawatt plant was around Rs 3,000 crore
per year". The department of economic affairs had also warned that the
"...risk of counter-guarantees being invoked was not unreal, given that state
electricity bills had been defaulting in payments". Caution was thrown to the
winds then. The least India can do now is ask for a re-negotiation. But does
the Indian government have the courage to go eyeball-to-eyeball with Enron
and not blink first?
* Scrapping the power purchase agreement involves a one-time payment of Rs
2,910 crore
* However, India would save over Rs 9,000 crore by doing so
* There would be a net saving even after writing off FI loans to Dabhol Power
Company



IDBI: whose life is it, anyway?
Tamal Bandyopadhyay

05/03/2001
Business Standard
14
Copyright © Business Standard

On April 30 a terse one-line announcement by the finance ministry gave the
acting chairman and managing director of Industrial Development Bank of India
(IDBI), S K Chakrabarti, a three-month extension. The government was generous
enough not to keep the CMD as well as the institution waiting till late
evening which it normally does for the fax message from North Block.
But the acting IDBI chief may be asked to step down even in three weeks if
the government is able to identify his successor. He has been reappointed for
a period of three months or till a regular CMD takes charge "whichever is
earlier". Could there have been a better way to insult the country's largest
financial institution (and its chief)?
First, the government planned to merge the Industrial Finance Corporation of
India (IFCI) _which is on the brink of collapse under the burden of
ballooning non-performing assets with IDBI to make them sink together. Unable
to push through the proposal in the face of stiff resistance put up by IDBI,
the government now appears to be keen on leading the country's premier
financial institution to its grave alone. This, not by giving an extension to
the existing acting chief but by failing to identify his successor and
thereby continuing the uncertainty at the top. Nothing can move in an
organisation when the CEO himself does not know how long he will survive.
India's financial institutions have been repositioning themselves by going
short-term both on the assets as well as the liabilities sides. But for that
transformation to take effect, they need leaders with a long-term tenure at
the helm.
To understand this, let's look at what's happening at ICICI, another
financial institution in the country that is breathing down on IDBI's neck
and threatening to overtake it. K V Kamath, CEO and managing director of
ICICI, got a second five-year term seven days ahead of the expiry of his
first term on March 30. Once his second term is complete, Kamath will have
ended up running the show at ICICI for a decade. ICICI does not only give its
chief a long term to steer the ship but also grooms talent to take over the
institution in due course. Kamath was groomed by his predecessor N Vaghul. In
turn, he is now grooming Nachiket Mor to succeed him.
Mor, a former senior general manager of ICICI, has recently been shifted to
ICICI Bank as an executive director in charge of wholesale banking. He is
likely to be made the managing director of the bank when the present
incumbent H N Sinor steps down next year. Eventually, he will take over the
mantle from Kamath in 2006 by which time his stint at the bank will have
given him enough operational experience in addition to his treasury
management and other skills.
Given the circumstances, IDBI is fighting a losing battle. It will not be
surprising if it goes the IFCI way with an uncertain leadership unable to
steer a demoralised, overstaffed ship becalmed by the apathetic bureaucracy
of the North Block. This is despite its tremendous brand value in project
financing and widespread corporate relationships.
Carved out of the Reserve Bank of India by an Act of Parliament in 1976, IDBI
has business relations with virtually every corporate house in India. But
that is not helping it tide over the crisis, because the key to any financial
intermediary's success at this juncture is how it handles its resources _both
currency as well as human. In an ideal situation, the cost of funds should be
lower while the cost of human resources should be market-driven. In IDBI's
case, it is the reverse: its cost of funds is on the higher side in the
absence of aggressive treasury operations and it is not allowed to pay
market-driven salary to its employees.
The net result? There has been an exodus of talent from IDBI and the
institution is struggling to stay afloat just when recession has prompted
corporations to cut back on their borrowings. IDBI's sanctions and
disbursements have been falling and non-performing assets increasing. It is
sitting on piles of cash but finding deployment avenues hard to come by.
Two former chiefs of IDBI S H Khan and G P Gupta spent a large chunk of their
tenure and energy pleading with the finance ministry to delink IDBI's salary
structure from that of the Reserve Bank of India, but without success. Small
wonder that Chakrabarti, who became acting chairman on February 1 for a
three-month term, has singled out the low morale of the staff as his prime
concern. He wants to address this on a war footing. The Centre has now
successfully demoralised him by offering him another uncertain term.
Former finance minister Manmohan Singh accepted Khan's argument on
market-driven package (he reportedly wanted a pay scale for his employees
that was higher ICICI's) but could not do anything about it. P Chidambaram
repeated Singh's failure on this front and Yashwant Sinha too thinks the
proposal is not worth considering because it will have a ripple effect in the
industry. For instance, RBI employees will immediately demand their pound of
flesh. The finance ministry refuses to see the point that the country's
central bank is not a commercial organisation and does not have to compete
with ICICI.
When three successive finance ministers failed to address IDBI's, problems,
the institution went for soft options. It ended up appointing three
consultants for restructuring in six years! First, Booz, Allen & Hamilton (in
1997), followed by M B Athreya (in 1999) and finally Boston Consulting Group
(2001). The third consultant, BCG, is yet to submit its report.
While Booz, Allen & Hamilton charted out the roadmap for diversification and
suggested that the institution spread its wings overseas and tap new business
opportunities, the Athreya panel said it must convert itself into a bank and
the government's stake should come down without delay.
Over the last few years, the institution has been planning its conversion
into a bank and blaming the economy for its indifferent performance even as
ICICI has been going full steam with new initiatives. ICICI Bank is also
exploiting synergies with its parent to the hilt while IDBI Bank seems to be
embarrassed about ackowledging its pedigree.
It's not that everything is great at ICICI. Over the past few years, the
institution has lost some senior executives: I-Sec managing director Kishore
Chaukar left to join the Tata group, ICICI senior general managers Anando
Mukherji joined Enron and N J Subaiah took charge at Centurion Bank (which he
subsequently left). The industry suspects the quality of ICICI's assets and
is not comfortable with the scorching pace of growth.
Even the well-paid ICICI executive cadres find the pace of work is too much
to handle and complain of fatigue. In private, they hate the mad rush for
excellence. And yet there is a method in ICICI's madness. It has trimmed the
flab with two successive voluntary retirement schemes, branched out into
consumer loans in a big way and transformed treasury operations into an art.
The finance ministry would do well to explore the possibility of divesting
the government's stake in IDBI to ICICI. Instead of pumping in Rs 300 crore
as recapitalisation funds into IFCI it can simply let it die and sell its
assets to other banks and financial institutions. IDBI's bulk and the brand
name in project financing would combine well with ICICI's growing retail
presence and unbridled aggression. The combination would be formidable enough
to give the State Bank of India a run for its money.
Of course, a whole lot of issues need to settled before the process takes off
like trimming the flab in IDBI and delinking it from the RBI pay structure et
al. IDBI merging with ICICI may sound like an absurd dream but it is
certainly a better option than merging IFCI with IDBI. If Reliance is willing
to bid for state-run oil majors HPCL and BPCL, what's the harm in wooing
ICICI to take over IDBI?


UK names coastal zones
HUGH O'MAHONY

05/03/2001
Lloyd's List International
6
Copyright (C) 2001 LLoyds List; Source: World Reporter (TM)
For wind farm installations The UK's potential to exploit wind energy
offshore has taken a step closer to reality.
The Crown Estate has nominated 13 zones in UK coastal waters for wind farm
installation, marrying 18 developers to nominated 10 sq km sites.
The 18 developers have pre-qualified to obtain lease of seabed agreements,
with each of the sites having space to accommodate 30 The largest of the
sites calls for the installation of 90 turbines at the Shell Flat, 7 km off
Cleveleys (northwest England).
This is in the hands of three developers: Shell WindEnergy Aegir; Elsam; and
Celtpower.
Other developers are: Solway Offshore and Offshore Energy Resources (at
Solway Firth); Warwick Energy (Barrow); EnergieKontor UK Offshore
(Southport); SeaScape Energy (Burbo); NWP Offshore (North Hoyle); Celtic
Offshore Wind (Rhyl Flats); Hyder Industrial (Scarweather Sands); NEG Micon
(Kentish Flats); Enron Wind Gunfleet (Gunfleet Sands); Powergen Renewables
(Scroby Sands); Beaufort Consortium (Cromer); AMEC Offshore Wind Power
(Lynn); Offshore Wind Power (Inner Dowsing); and Northern Offshore Wind
(Teesside).
By the end of July, Crown Estates will issue full lease arrangements.
No more than three years later, the licensees must take up 20-year leases,
committing to construction within two years.
By 2006, offshore wind farming should be a reality in the UK.
Should all the 18 projects go ahead, the combined energy output from the
various sites could reach between 1,000 MW and 1,500 MW, depending on whether
developers install 2 MW or 3 MW turbines.
The existing standard is 2 MW but, by 2005, it is anticipated that 3 MW units
will be practicable.
The DTI has suggested that offshore wind energy will contribute 1.8% of total
UK electricity by 2010, equivalent to 2,612 MW.
While this may not be relative to non-the developments already mooted call
for the installation of 540 turbines, and overall investment from the private
sector of Pounds 1.6bn (Dollars 2.3bn), and the plans offer significant
potential for UK-based turbine construction.
For offshore use, the turbines feature a monopile steel foundation, driven
into the seabed.
The wind turbines, connected in daisy-chain fashion, are linked to land-based
substations via conventional submarine cable, plugging into the national
grid.
Danish specialist Vestas Wind Systems is preparing its first major offshore
wind farm site, the 80 turbine, 160 MW Horns Rev site off the coast of
Denmark, in concert with utility Elsam.
Vestas has also already turbines to Scroby Sands and Blyth, pilot UK projects
using two turbines respectively off the coast of Great Yarmouth and Blyth.
The supplier is now keen to develop a UK-based manufacturing site and has
been in negotiations with the Scottish Executive over construction of its
first UK-based turbine tower plant, at Machrihinish, the former US airbase,
which remains in the hands of the MoD.
NEG Micon, another Danish builder of offshore wind turbines, is also one of
the developers in the UK, with a proposal to install 30 turbines at Kentish
Flats.
NEG Micon has installed offshore wind turbines at Yttrestengrad, Sweden, and
is also participating in the Danish coastal programme.
NEGhas already established a UK manufacturing presence, having bought out
Aerolaminates in 1998 from Taylor Woodrow, and developed a riverside
blade-building facility on the Isle of Wight, capable of building blades of
up to 50 m in length.
This size of blade will equip turbines to develop 3 MW of power, which the
manufacturer expects to be in place by 2005.



UK: Emetra delays derivatives, to focus on physicals

05/03/2001
Reuters English News Service
(C) Reuters Limited 2001.

LONDON, May 3 (Reuters) - Metals Internet trading group EMETRA has postponed
the development of its derivatives platform and will focus on building its
physical business, company CEO Peter Sellars said on Thursday.
"The world has changed in the past six months. It will be very tough to
launch the derivatives project right now," Sellars said. "We are focusing on
developing the physical platform and speeding that up a bit," he said.
EMETRA has secured fresh funding from its shareholders to continue developing
the physical metals trading platform, Sellars said.
EMETRA and Deutsche Boerse announced a letter of intent to develop a
derivatives platform in June of last year; under the terms of the deal DB was
to contribute the trading platform and take an equity stake in the
derivatives project.
The companies initially targeted January 2001 for the start-up of derivatives
trading; this deadline was gradually pushed back, but as recently as Copper
Club week in February EMETRA officials were indicating September of this year
as a likely launch date.
The company began trading on its physical platform last October at its
website, www.emetra.com, with over a million tonnes of initial liquidity.
EMETRA was founded in February 2000 as ajoint venture between London Metal
Exchange ring dealer MG plc - subsequently bough by U.S. energy and power
giant Enron Corp - Internet Capital Group and Safeguard International Fund.


??
Scottish Power Earnings Fall But US Strategy On Track
By Andrea Chipman
Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES

05/03/2001
Dow Jones International News
(Copyright © 2001, Dow Jones & Company, Inc.)

LONDON -(Dow Jones)- U.K. multi-utility Scottish Power PLC (SPI) reported
lower earnings for the 2000-2001 fiscal year Thursday but said it has
resolved problems with its U.S. Pacificorp subsidiary and has streamlined its
domestic business for further growth.
Scottish Power said pretax profit before goodwill, amortization and
exceptional items for the year ending March 31 fell to GBP628 million from
GBP736 million a year ago, in line with overall analyst expectations. Sales
rose to GBP6.35 billion from GBP4.12 billion a year ago.
The company reported adjusted earnings per share of 30.65 pence for the
current fiscal year, down from 41.22 pence a year earlier, and said it will
pay a total dividend of 26 pence a share after paying 24.8 pence a share a
year earlier.
Scottish Power said it has taken a number of steps to improve shareholder
value, including restructuring into three divisions - a U.S. division to
include its Pacificorp unit, and two U.K. sectors concentrating on generation
and power supply, and infrastructure - to focus on energy growth and expand
its activities overseas. Analysts reached before a meeting with the company
said they were looking for more details on the company's growth strategy.
The company said its Utah-based Hunter power plant is back on line feeding
electricity into the local grid after a six-month outage that exposed the
company to inflated western U.S. wholesale electricity prices and cost
Scottish Power an estimated $160 million.
"This year's financial results have been impacted by the outage at the Hunter
power station in Utah at a time of exceptional volatility in the western U.S.
power markets, and by the expected reductions in revenues resulting from the
U.K. regulatory reviews" Chief Executive Ian Russell said.
With Hunter back on track, Scottish Power is looking to grow the business of
Pacificorp, Hunter's owner, and plans to add some 1,000 megawatts of new
capacity by the end of the year, Russell said.
He didn't rule out plans for further acquisitions in the U.S., but declined
to confirm or deny reports earlier this week that the U.K. utility is
considering bidding for Enron Corp.'s (ENE) Oregon-based subsidiary, Portland
General.
"Obviously Portland is in our own backyard," Russell said. "Frankly, we're
still busy with Pacificorp and at the moment; that's what we're focusing on."
Closer to home, competition in the wholesale generation and retail supply
markets squeezed Scottish Power's profit margins, with generation operating
profits at GBP93 million, down GBP14 million from the 1999-2000 fiscal year.
The company's customer base remained flat at 3.5 million.
Scottish Power is interested in further expansion in both generation and
supply, Russell said.
"Our strategy is very definitely to expand in the UK, both in generation and
supply," Russell said. "We are very focused on expanding the value that we
get from that integrated chain. At the moment, we are doing well on the
organic side and would seek opportunities in acquisitive supply if we thought
we could do so profitably."
The company's regulated infrastructure business was also hit by strict
revenue limits, cutting total operating profit in its power systems and water
business to GBP545.5 million from GBP647.7 million a year earlier. The
company's 90% debt levels are likely to increase pressure on Scottish Power
to sell its Southern Water unit in order to fund its expansion strategy,
Lehman Brothers analyst Gareth Lewis-Davies said.
Speaking to journalists on a conference call Russell reiterated that the
company is still considering all options for the water company, although he
confirmed that Scottish Power had received "a number of offers" from
potential buyers.
"We have had a number of offers of interest, but we are weeks, or months,
away from announcing anything," Russell said. "The underlying performance of
Southern Water as a business has been very good."
He declined to identify bidders or discuss prices offered. Italian energy
company Enel SpA (ENI) is the only company to publicly declare its interest
in Southern Water.
The chief executive also insisted that his company is still committed to its
telecoms unit Thus, in which it holds a 50.1% stake, despite the company's
report Tuesday of a 2000 fiscal year loss before interest, taxation,
depreciation and amortization of GBP21.4 million.
"We're very supportive of Thus's strategy. I think the results show they have
turned the corner," he said, noting that the unit demonstrated growth of more
than 30% in its underlying business. "We are very happy with them."
Company Web site: www.scottishpower.com
-By Andrea Chipman, Dow Jones Newswires; 44-207-842-9259;
andrea.chipman@dowjones.com



Scottish Power CEO: Hunter Plant Fully On Line

05/03/2001
Dow Jones International News
(Copyright © 2001, Dow Jones & Company, Inc.)

LONDON -(Dow Jones)- Scottish Power PLC's (SPI) Utah-based Hunter power plant
is fully on line following a six-month outage, Chief Executive Ian Russell
told a media conference call Thursday.
"The plant started commissioning this last weekend, has been building up and
is now producing electricity," Russell said. The plant is pumping electricity
into its regional grid.
The plant, which belongs to Scottish Power's Portland, Oregon-based
Pacificorp unit, went out of service in November after an electrical short in
the laminate ends of the plant machinery started a fire.
The outage exposed the U.K. utility to wholesale electricity prices inflated
by the power crisis in the Western U.S. market, costing the company an
average of $1 million a day. The total cost of the outage is around $160
million, Russell said.
He said the company is planning 1,000 megawatts of new capacity in the U.S.
by the end of this year, a 10% increase in its U.S. capacity. The new
capacity will include 100 MW of peaking plant from the Gadsby generator in
Salt Lake City, which is already up and running, and 400 MW from its Klamath
Falls plant in Oregon, which is scheduled to be on line by the end of the
month.
Russell declined to comment on reports earlier this week that Scottish Power
is considering buying Enron Corp.'s (ENE) Oregon-based subisidiary, Portland
General.
"Obviously Portland is in our own backyard," Russell said. "Frankly, we're
still busy with Pacificorp and at the moment that's what we're focusing on."

Turning to Scottish Power's U.K. businesses, Russell said it had received "a
number of offers" for its Southern Water unit but reiterated the company
hasn't yet decided on a sale.
"We have had a number of offers of interest, but we are weeks, or months,
away from announcing anything," Russell said. "The underlying performance of
Southern Water as a business has been very good."
The company is continuing to look at all options for the unit, including
refinancing it to draw out more