|
Friday 19th April 2013 |
Text too small? |
Meridian Energy and the owners of its largest customer, the Tiwai Point aluminium smelter, are continuing to talk after an intense three days' face to face negotiation last week, with parties in both Wellington and Sydney crunching numbers on possible new deals.
Neither side will comment on the record, but BusinessDesk understands efforts to find common ground on a new 18 year supply contract continue.
Nor would the smelter owner Pacific Aluminium, a Rio Tinto subsidiary, comment on the potential to strike a further new deal in the future under a Labour-Greens government for lower power costs.
Labour and the Greens are arguing the cost of hydro-electricity is as low as $1 per Megawatt hour, and companies like Meridian are making "super-profits" by selling it at wholesale electricity market prices averaging around $65 per MWh in recent months.
The smelter contract, covering one-seventh of total New Zealand generation, is understood to be paying just under $50 per MWh for its load.
Pacific Aluminium has been advancing the argument to journalists and politicians that New Zealand's power prices are too high and should be charged at a price more based on historic and actual operating cost than pursuing the cost of the next cheapest unit of new electricity generation.
BusinessDesk.co.nz
No comments yet
PYS - PaySauce to announce F26 full year results on 27 May 2026
PEB - Draft LCD Proposes Medicare Coverage for Triage and Triage
MEL - Meridian Energy monthly operating report for April 2026
FBU - Sale of South Australian property
AIR - Air New Zealand market update
May 14th Morning Report
PEB - Pacific Edge Placement Increased to NZ$25.4 Million
Radius Care Reports Earnings Growth and 50% Higher Dividend
May 13th Morning Report
Pacific Edge launches capital raise of NZ$24 million