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IEEFA Update: Why Investors Are Watching the Navajo Generating Station Story So Closely

May 02, 2018
Karl Cates

Word last week that two potential buyers are interested in the failing Navajo Generating Station (NGS) in Arizona turned heads regionally and nationally — perhaps even globally.

The fate of NGS, as the power plant is known for short is a major story in the state. NGS is in remote far-northern Arizona, almost 300 miles from Phoenix, but is an important local employer. The plant and its Peabody Energy source mine at Kayenta, which produces coal solely for NGS, account for somewhere around 800 jobs on Navajo and Hopi tribal lands. Both generate taxes and royalties that support tribal budgets, so the local economic implications of whatever happens are significant.

Also feeding the Arizona angle: The likelihood that if the plant were to somehow remain open under new ownership past its scheduled retirement date at the end of 2019, it would continue to produce electricity that could not compete price-wise with cheaper power from natural gas, solar, and wind. The current owners are closing NGS because they no longer consider it a viable business.

It is possible the power station represents no more than a tax-beneficial loss or a scrap-metal sale for anyone who buys it.

It’s a big plant — the largest coal-fired generation station west of the Mississippi — and is often held up as a prime example of a U.S. electricity-generation transformation in which natural gas has overtaken coal as the main power-generation fuel of choice and as ever-cheaper renewable energy continues to gain market share from coal and gas alike.

 

Research by David Schlissel, IEEFA’s director of resource planning analysis, concludes that the only way to keep the plant open through the 2020s would be for either the federal government — or electricity ratepayers — to provide $2 billion to $3 billion in subsidies.

NGS has been cited as a test case of Trump administration support for the declining coal industry, though no plans have come forth yet from any federal agency to preserve the status quo.

This despite the fact that Peabody is working desperately to arrange some sort of deal — very likely subsidized in one way or another by ratepayers — to keep the plant running. Peabody just yesterday announced it was suing Central Arizona Project, the state’s main waterworks and the largest NGS customer, to compel it to keep buying high-priced power from the plant.

THIS WOULD PUT MARKET FORCES AND PUBLIC POLICY AT ODDS, and it’s what makes the future of Navajo Generating Station so interesting to energy-sector investors.

An article published by Bloomberg News last week breaking the news that two out-of-state companies, Avenue Capital Group of New York and Middle River Power of Chicago, have talked of buying NGS, was the top story for a full day on the Bloomberg Terminal global list of most-read articles (it was later published outside Bloomberg’s pay wall). A follow-up Bloomberg story on how the largest owner of the plant says it will start dismantling the plant unless new owners are found within the next couple of weeks, rose to No. 3 on the same list.

These rankings suggest that sophisticated investors—money managers, investments banks and institutional funds—who make up the vast majority of Bloomberg’s more than 320,000 subscribers around the world, are watching the Navajo Generating Station story closely.

Will NGS shut down as anticipated, signaling regional and national momentum around a global electricity-generation transition that favors cleaner, cheaper power?

Or are there government subsidies and such in the works to keep the plant — and one small but symbolic corner of the U.S. coal industry — on life support, a possibility that might make coal mining a more attractive investment than it has been in a long time?

Whether Avenue Capital and Middle River Power really see NGS as a long-term going concern is another matter. It is possible the power station represents no more than a tax-beneficial loss or a scrap-metal sale for anyone who buys it.

Regardless, what investors seem to want to know is which will prevail in U.S. electricity generation: market forces or politics?

What they might also like to know is that the region has better investment opportunities than in an outdated and failing coal plant.

Plant and mine workers have skills that can be harnessed by other, more modern industries, and Arizona, as the buckle of the sunbelt and in a region with huge open spaces, has vast untapped solar and wind energy possibilities too.

Karl Cates is IEEFA’s managing editor. A version of this column appeared yesterday in The Hill.

RELATED ITEMS:

IEEFA Update: Push to Keep Navajo Generating Station Alive in Deal With Arizona Water Distributor Is Fraught With Risk 

IEEFA Update: Lazard Risks Its Reputation by Working With Peabody

IEEFA Update: 2 Out-of-State Potential Navajo Generating Station Buyers Face Long Odds

Karl Cates

Former IEEFA Transition Policy Analyst Karl Cates has been an editor for Bloomberg LP, an editor for the New York Times, and a consultant to the Treasury Department-sanctioned community development financial institution (CDFI) industry.

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