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A Financial Model For Geothermal Development

By Stuart D. Logan

Background

Escalating petroleum prices have visited adversity on a world already struggling with the financial hardships and physical threats associated with imported oil.  Such heightened concerns add urgency to the related conversation among scientists regarding the effect of industrial CO2 on global warming.  As individuals and enterprises refocus their attention on the expedited replacement of hydrocarbon power, governments continue to impose carrot-and-stick systems designed to swing the balance away from fossil fuel and toward other, endorsed means of producing energy.

We of course welcome the scientific enhancement of, and the environmentally conscious use of, traditional fuels.  For instance, an abundant domestic resource like coal presents fewer of the challenges posed by imported fuels, and also creates far less pollution per kilowatt hour than in years past.  However, discussions in the board room, debates in the legislature, and experiments in the lab now focus more and more on the existing and proposed technologies called alternative energy.  That phrase refers to the power acquired from photovoltaic cells, solar-thermal stores, subterranean heat, oceanic-temperature strata, nuclear fission, hydroelectric dams, wind turbines, biomass, and other relatively recent technologies.  These modern methods create effluents on a far smaller scale than do fossil fuels, and so we often associate alternative energy with its relatively light environmental footprint.

Appeal

Merchant bankers, fund managers and other venture capitalists keep their eyes open to emerging markets and growth industries.  They then devote their acumen to identifying undercapitalized businesses within those industries and markets.  Not surprisingly, the alternative-energy industry has, over the past decade, earned increased attention from venture capitalists, leading to a marked rise in invested dollars.

Frequently, such investments take the form of a joint venture, in which a money partner and an operating partner establish a single-purpose enterprise to own and conduct the mutually held business (a “Venture”).  Interested parties will thereby effectuate their funding decision, and implement their business plan, through the Venture.  That business plan not only will govern the Venture as the developer of a new business, but also will control the managerial, financial and participatory rights of those involved.

In this way and others, investment dollars have found their way to (a) energy producers whose technologies have yet to demonstrate much practical effect (such as deuterium-based fusion), (b) energy producers with proven technologies but with still-limited commercial viability (witness the current state of wind turbines in Germany), and (c) energy producers whose technologies have thrived in the marketplace as well as in the lab (as affirmed by France’s successful and extensive reliance on nuclear reactors).

Nonetheless, one might well argue that, in those many regions with the proper physical characteristics, no form of alternative energy surpasses geothermal technology for cost competitiveness, efficiency of generation, and gentility to the environment.  Moreover, geothermal energy, unlike many other alternative-energy sources, promises base-load power (referring to a steady stream of around-the-clock wattage).  Even within the field of base-load energy, geothermal technology carries none of the political baggage that has impeded nuclear development in the United States, nor does it face the geological saturation point that now limits the growth of America’s hydroelectric industry.

The creation of geothermal energy does, of course, require capital investment.  Hence, the Venture structure suits this form of power generation, whether engaged in by (a) a financial partner and a technology partner wishing to dedicate themselves to a new enterprise, (b) two established firms seeking to pool resources for a third business, or (c) a private company and a government agency intending to employ their respective rights and assets to soften a fossil-fuel crunch bearing down on their region.  Although many firms have exploited this method of power generation, and although a great many happy tales have come from such efforts, geothermal energy remains an underemployed resource that, relatively speaking, lies beneath the proverbial radar.

Focus

One may harness the subsurface-temperature gradient to warm or cool buildings using heat exchangers.  Such a technique entails the circulation of fluids via a closed loop running through both the earth and a neighboring structure.  This effective and simple brand of alternative energy already lowers the utility bills of numerous families and firms, which often exploit the geological resource using electronic heat pumps and heat sinks.  However, the regime offers little benefit to anyone outside the immediate vicinity.

Hence, most Ventures planning to sell geothermal-based energy to the public will elect to generate electricity.  Using injection wells and production wells reaching thousands of feet into the earth, the Venture creates steam to animate turbine-powered generators.  The resulting electricity then either feeds into the regional power grid through a trunk line, or serves as the dedicated power source for a neighboring development.

Incentives

Such states as Alaska, California, Hawaii, Idaho, Nevada, Texas and Washington boast readily exploitable strata.  Happily, though, geothermal-energy production holds promise in even those regions of the country with relatively subtle subsurface heat gradients.  For instance, Michigan’s government has, through legislative fiat and executive policy, sought to facilitate alternative-energy development in the state.  Earlier this autumn, Governor Granholm signed a bill to ensure that, by 2015, at least one-tenth of electricity sold in Michigan will come from geothermal, solar and other alternative sources.

Even in geologically dormant areas like those comprising most of Michigan, geothermal production shows significant potential.  That potential will depend on tried-and-true advances in low-temperature-resource technologies.  Thanks in part to such technologies, Michigan’s place in the world of geothermal energy might come to depend on the harnessing of hot wastewater drawn from fossil-fuel wells.  (The U.S. Department of Energy recognizes the astronomical possibilities, and awarded a multi-million-dollar grant to establish the commercial viability of wastewater-based electricity.)

Accordingly, those who harness geothermal energy may seek regulatory assistance or may otherwise pursue governmentally conferred economic incentives.  One class of potential benefit entails the grant of subsidies intended to reduce the Venture’s cost to develop its project.  Another type of possible subsidy pertains to regulatory programs designed to facilitate entry into the broader market for electricity.

In the absence of accessible consumers, even an expertly developed power plant will fail.  So, federal law requires those in control of the transmission, distribution and subdistribution network to make the power grid available to alternative-energy suppliers on a commercial, nondiscriminatory basis.  Although the controlling federal statute applies only to wholesale distribution, many states have expanded the mandate, thereby entitling suppliers to transmit alternative energy to retail customers via the grid.

Added expense arises whenever large distances separate the facility and grid.  The ideal locale for a geothermal well might lie miles from the nearest community.  So, in the case of so-called location-constrained generating resources, the Venture might have the ability to employ government programs designed to help finance the cost of the intertie.

The federal tax code confers two substantial subsidies on suppliers of geothermal energy.  The production credit will, subject to certain exceptions and adjustments, reduce the Venture’s tax bill by $0.015 per kilowatt-hour of geothermal-sourced electricity, a benefit that continues during the first decade of facility operations.  Last-minute amendments to the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act ― colloquially known as the financial bail-out ― have widened the scope of this tax incentive.  Prior law denied the credit to any power plant placed in service after 2008.  Now, the credit covers geothermal-based generators fired up as late as December 31, 2010.

By way of contrast, the law conferring the investment credit includes no sunset provision.  The investment credit offers a pecuniary incentive to those who acquire and operate new electric-power plants running on geothermal energy.  Speaking in broad generalities, the investment credit would offset taxes by a sum equal to 10% of the Venture’s investment.  (That said, any financial benefits earned via the investment credit would pare away at the production credit described in the foregoing paragraph.)

Government might also provide the Venture with access to geologically suitable land.  Thus, the developer might acquire rights, whether via the purchase of a tract (or even a completed facility) from the public agency, or via the acquisition of energy rights through a geothermal lease sale conducted by the Federal Bureau of Land Management.

As with all industrial facilities, federal, state and municipal regulation will, to varying degrees, dictate the manner in which plant construction moves forward.  Looking at only one of the features specific to geothermal operations, the Venture must identify and hire a specially licensed driller to install the injection and production wells.  Also, states impose licensing mandates for energy suppliers, and, moreover, promulgate codes of conduct to regulate supplier activities.  Accordingly, rules, manuals and directives explain how the alternative energy supplier should (a) solicit potential customers, (b) set the price of electricity, (c) transfer willing fossil-fuel customers from the extant utility to the alternative-energy supplier, (d) ensure an uninterrupted flow of electrons to customers in good standing, (e) bill, and collect from, each of its customers, and (f) procedurally and physically connect its generator to the power grid.

Suitability

Geothermal-sourced electricity offers the capitalist a scalable technology.  Years of experience have proven that one can harness geothermal energy — and can maintain financial and technological efficiencies — even at relatively modest capacities.  (This advantage distinguishes geothermal methods from many competing sources of alternative energy, and contrasts dramatically with, say, hydroelectric power.)

Second, the geothermal industry relies on a mature technology.  The extant know-how not only poses a lower risk of engineering failure, but also allows execution using equipment that by and large comes off-the-shelf.  So, the Venture bears less expense, uncertainty and delay from the invention, manufacture or customization of the facility.

Third, although the evaluation of a proposed well site will ordinarily require a significant outlay to cover due diligence, that financial challenge poses less of an obstacle in light of the geothermal maps and related data that abound in the public domain.  Such information shows that vast regions of the United States offer high-quality resources in the form of shallow-and-abundant heat.  Moreover, natural factors mitigate (but cannot eliminate) the risk of a categorical failure within the geothermal industry:  Sufficient heat will ultimately lie at some depth, even below a misjudged tract.  Occasionally, a fruitful stratum will reside only a manageable distance from the planned level.  Certainly, the necessary degree of geological analysis contrasts with the more-extensive studies typically associated with, say, the extraction of petroleum from newly targeted fields.

Fourth, various engineering and consulting firms specialize in the facilitation of nascent geothermal enterprises.  Thus, the Venture might reasonably come to depend more on its control of suitable land and investor capital, and less on its own technical acumen.

In these ways, the financial and managerial features of the smaller-scale geothermal Venture conveniently resemble those of more-pedestrian commercial undertakings.  In particular, those seeking to create and sell geothermal-based electricity might consult a financial template generally reserved for the investor-occupied commercial building.

Opportunity

Various engineering firms market their expertise in gauging the geothermal potential of client-controlled tracts.  In fact, given the right circumstances, the Venture may ignore the process otherwise needed to evaluate — and may skirt the potential disappointment associated with the validation of — a proposed site.  As noted above, private enterprise has from time to time purchased (whether from government agencies or private enterprises) tracts with already-proven commercially suitable energy resources.

Third-party contractors ― including United Technologies, Ormat Technologies and Raser Technologies ― provide equipment, software, drawings and/or expertise as an asset package for sale to clientele.  Such packages include not only tangible components comprising the infrastructure to produce geothermal electricity, but also the know-how to facilitate such production.

Other early-stage requisites include the contracting process through which the Venture will link to the power grid.  As already mentioned, the Venture may tap into a ready-made distribution system by dealing with the local electric company,  Thus, the Venture harnesses a vehicle typically able to transmit all electricity produced from hot rock.

A pioneer in the industry, AltaRock Energy, has raised millions of investment dollars from venture capitalists eager to underwrite its facilities.  Through such efforts, the producer/promoter has funded a geothermal enterprise promising electrical current in the hundreds of megawatts.  (Other facilities, such as the unsurpassed Geysers complex owned by Calpine, throw off hundreds of megawatts of power, while the smallest complexes produce under 100 kilowatts of geothermal-sourced electricity.)

Today’s economic and regulatory circumstances create a welcoming environment for profitable investment in geothermal-electricity producers, whether at the levels reached by Calpine or AltaRock, or at the more-modest levels that this scalable technology permits.  A Venture might spend little more than two million dollars on engineering, design, exploratory, grading, consulting, drilling, regulatory, construction, outfitting, testing and start-up costs for a 400 KW facility.  (The Venture’s capital infusion must also account for certain additional outlays, to permit the funding of such pre-cash-flow essentials as land acquisition, facility testing, regulatory satisfaction, and working capital.  The budget will also contain a line for professional fees to help address organizational, managerial, contractual, financial and syndication matters.)  Of course, the actual level of development capital will depend on the particulars of the project, especially given such commercial variables as the size of the power plant, and also given such geographic attributes as the temperature gradient of the subterranean column, the access to water, and the distance separating the turbine and the grid.

Illustration

The constitution of the Venture may reflect structures traditionally associated with other joint enterprises.  To focus on fundamentals, one might identify two general categories of participant, founders and investors.  The founders hold most of the managerial authority and attain their status by virtue of (a) the vision and effort they might have devoted to the nascent Venture, (b) the operational or engineering expertise they might profess, and/or (c) the rights they might hold in a particular tract of promising land.  A venture capitalist or a syndicate of wealthy individuals (or angels) act as investors, by risking their capital and/or credit to finance the Venture’s anticipated operation.

The founders would ordinarily cast the Venture as a limited liability company dedicated to operations that entail (a) locating and vetting the site on which the physical plant will reside and into which the Venture will dig the wells, (b) applying for regulatory approval, (c) soliciting, and contracting with, customers already on the power grid owned by the local utility and the International Transmission Company, (d) acquiring the evaluated parcel, (e) engaging contractors to sink the wells, design the facilities, construct the plant, and connect with the grid, and (f) hiring staff to operate and promote the station.

As the constitutional document, the Venture’s operating agreement would authorize discrete equity interests in the enterprise (“Units”).  Each founder or investor would become a member of the Venture upon his, her or its acquisition of one or more Units.

One of the Units (the “Control Unit”) would confer on its holder (a) managerial authority over the Venture, and (b) a set of subordinated financial entitlements (the “Carry”).  (The designation of managerial authority via the Control Unit might reduce the investors’ tax burden and would accommodate a succession plan along most any preferred line.)

All remaining Units (“Basic Units”) would mirror one another and would belong to the investors.  The Basic Units would grant the investors all economic rights otherwise available to the members of a limited liability company, subject only to the Carry.  The Venture’s operating agreement would specifically delineate the investors’ control over the Venture (typically limiting such authority to terminating the Manager’s command in the case of malfeasance, and also to vetoing proposed related-party transactions).  The Venture’s operating agreement would in addition proscribe specified acts of disloyalty.

Concurrently, the founders would establish, and would serve as the sole members of, a second limited liability company (the “Manager”).  The Manager would take title to the Control Unit and thereafter act as a uniquely categorized member of the Venture.  As such, the Manager would hold (a) the Carry (through which the founders would, on a subordinated basis, indirectly share in the Venture’s profits), and (b) managerial sway over the Venture (through which the founders would exercise ultimate control over the operation).  Each founder would contribute (or sell) to the Manager any and all of his, her or its rights in the tangible or intangible assets on which the Venture plans to rely.  In turn, the Manager would contribute (or sell) to the Venture those newly acquired rights.  The Manager’s operating agreement would divide authority among the founders, and would constrain specified activities that might place a founder in competition with (or that would effect the transfer of an equity interest in) the Manager.

As noted, the Carry would contain the Manager’s financial rights as a member of the Venture.  To further the illustration, such rights would correspond to a set percentage of all distributions by the Venture.  However, the Manager would share in those distributions, only after each investor has received (a) the recoupment of his, her or its invested capital (the “Corpus”), and (b) a premium entitling each investor to an accrual of “interest” on his, her or its Corpus (the “Coupon”).  After satisfying the investors’ priority right to the Corpus and Coupon, the Manager would, by virtue of the Carry, take a set share of all future distributions of the Venture’s available funds.  (Although the Manager must wait until the investors collect their priority return, the founders may earn undelayed fees for any services that the Venture might have engaged them to perform.)

The Manager will set the price and size of each Unit in light of the outlays anticipated by the Venture’s development budget (net of any debt financing).  After ascribing an equal price to each Unit, the Manager can, in reliance on the Venture’s pro forma income statement, generate a schedule.  That schedule would, for any one Unit, associate (a) a particular rate of return (an “IRR”), with (b) a particular Carry fraction and Coupon rate.

The chosen IRR must satisfy the relevant, narrowly drawn capital market.  The operative IRR might effectively materialize from negotiations with a particular venture capitalist.  In other cases, the IRR will approximate the Venture’s considered impression of the return needed to sell all offered Units to a syndicate of targeted angels.  In any case, the selected IRR will evolve from a study of the competing returns projected by other closely held start-ups, and from a concurrent analysis of the specific risks that might distinguish the Units from other privately placed securities in the market.  By applying the chosen IRR to the schedule described in the foregoing paragraph, the Venture will select the Carry fraction reserved to the Manager (although the founders remain free to increase the Coupon rate, if they would prefer a higher Carry fraction).

In deference to the laws that regulate the issuance of unregistered securities like the Units, the Venture will, when soliciting investors, (a) employ conforming prospectuses and subscription agreements, (b) eschew public notices to promote Unit sales, (c) prohibit investors from transferring Units, except under extraordinary circumstances, (d) pay commissions, if at all, only to persons registered as brokers under federal law, and (e) promise to remunerate the founders and their affiliates only to the extent, and only under the circumstances, disclosed to the investors prior to the Venture’s capitalization.

This foregoing hypothetical presents only one possible method of dividing and prioritizing distributable cash.  (Specifically, today’s example illustrates a rather simple method of splitting proceeds.  At the same time, the template also places an especially elementary foundation under the required tax allocations and accounting rules.)

Conclusion

We note that legislatures have, in recent years, tended to retract, rather than create, subsidies for land development.  Yet, federal, state and local governments still demonstrate a desire to accommodate real estate devoted to alternative energy.  We contend with an economic downturn that has undercut the suppliers, and that has bewildered the consumers, participating in various industries.  Yet, the industries focused on technological innovation continue to capture the public’s imagination and inform the government’s plans.  We face — with unprecedented clarity — environmental, political and sociological challenges borne from the American appetite for fuel.  The nation’s geothermal potential offers a means to assuage that appetite.  The developer or financier may pursue the opportunities using the Venture model.

Unlike many other types of alternative-energy projects, the successful geothermal Venture requires no scientific advancement, needs no further engineering to implement the necessary technology, poses a remarkably manageable risk of commercial failure, demands a relatively modest amount of capital, presumes no particular level of internally developed expertise, satisfies standards of environmental safety, and incites none of the larger controversies that shape today’s political debate.

Abount Author:

Mr. Logan practices law in the Bloomfield Hills, Michigan, office of Dykema. You may access his curriculum vitae via the following link: http://www.dykema.com/bio/display.asp?mode=web&empID=144

The author wishes to acknowledge and thank Donald B. Koretz for his expertise in helping to interpret the engineering analyses and technical models encountered over the course of the author’s research, and also for Mr. Koretz’s insightful critique of the penultimate draft of the article’s manuscript.

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