• Natural Gas News

    Russian Gas Helps Uniper Cut 3Q Loss

    old

Summary

Germany’s Uniper, the fossil fuel spinoff from E.On, has narrowed its losses thanks to continuing lower pricing from Gazprom since March.

by: Mark Smedley

Posted in:

Natural Gas & LNG News, Europe, Gas to Power, Corporate, Litigation, Import/Export, Infrastructure, Pipelines, Nord Stream Pipeline, Nord Stream 2, OPAL, News By Country, France, Germany, Russia

Russian Gas Helps Uniper Cut 3Q Loss

Germany’s Uniper, the fossil fuel spinoff from E.On, has narrowed its 3Q loss thanks to lower-priced Gazprom deliveries since March.

On November 22, it reported a 3Q2016 net loss of €348mn, compared to a year-ago loss of €3.43bn.

Sales volumes and end-user prices for both gas and power were much lower this year. But their impact on Uniper’s global commodities segment was more than offset by cheaper gas from Gazprom.

Adjusted 9M earnings (Ebit) to September 2016 rose by €975mn, or 305%, to €1.295bn (from €320mn in the same 2015 period) the main reason being a release of provisions relating to long-term gas procurement contracts with Gazprom. This was partly offset by a one-off payment this year to Gazprom for over-deliveries in 2009-15 to Uniper from the Yuzhno-Russkoye gasfield in Siberia.

Uniper CEO Klaus Schafer (Photo credit: Uniper)

“We’re currently exploring very carefully how we can continue to support the Nord Stream 2 project,” said CEO Klaus Schafer without elaborating on how. He did tell reporters though that the EU’s release of extra Opal capacity to Gazprom “has no impact” on Uniper earnings.

Uniper's nine-month 2016 net loss of €4.23bn however still outweighs its year-ago 9M loss of €3.34bn.

Adjusted 9M2016 Ebit on Uniper’s non-European power business lost €17mn due to a damage-related reduction in the book value of the 754 MW unit 3 at Berezov power station in Russia hit by a fire in February. Its European generation business's Ebit fell by 42% to €153mn due to a continued squeeze on margins, but the start-up earlier this year of its super-critical coal-fired 1,070 MW Maasvlakte-3 plant in Rotterdam had a positive impact.

CFO Christopher Delbruck forecast adjusted full year 2016 Ebitda of €1.9bn-€2.2bn (9M2016: €1.82bn).

 

Mark Smedley