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Monday, March 31, 2025

NiQuan in default … Steering Committee established to chart plan for the plant

by

Asha Javeed
477 days ago
20231210
Founder and CEO of NiQuan Energy  Ainsley Gill

Founder and CEO of NiQuan Energy Ainsley Gill

SOCIAL MEDIA

Lead Ed­i­tor In­ves­ti­ga­tions

asha.javeed@guardian.co.tt

Ni­Quan, the trou­bled gas-to-liq­uids plant which went of­fline in Sep­tem­ber, is now in de­fault of its US$150,000,000 mil­lion fa­cil­i­ty.

Hun­dreds of mil­lions are owed to lenders in­clud­ing some of the coun­try’s top banks and cred­it unions and 70 jobs are on the line.

The com­pa­ny’s fa­cil­i­ty agent, Re­pub­lic Bank Lim­it­ed (RBL), along with oth­er note­hold­ers passed a res­o­lu­tion on No­vem­ber 7, to ap­point a steer­ing com­mit­tee among note­hold­ers to es­tab­lish a plan for the now-de­funct plant mov­ing for­ward.

Co­in­ci­den­tal­ly, for­mer per­ma­nent sec­re­tary of the Min­istry of Fi­nance Al­i­son Lewis, who sat on the RBL board, re­tired last month. Lewis re­mains the vice chair­man of Ni­Quan.

The Sun­day Guardian un­der­stands that RBL’s ex­po­sure to Ni­Quan is about US$22 mil­lion.

The plant was used as col­lat­er­al as the com­pa­ny sought to raise mon­ey over the years to make it op­er­a­tional.

The Sun­day Guardian un­der­stands that as a fa­cil­i­ty agent, giv­en that Ni­Quan has now de­fault­ed on its two fi­nanc­ing in­stru­ments–a short-term note in­stru­ment and a mort­gage deben­ture, dat­ed Au­gust 27, 2021, which is US$150,000,000 se­cured mort­gage which was due by 2022–the note­hold­ers can take what­ev­er ac­tion they deem fit for the plant mov­ing for­ward.

In Oc­to­ber 2023 in a press state­ment, re­gion­al rat­ing agency Cari­CRIS low­ered Ni­Quan’s cred­it rat­ing to B- which im­pact­ed its abil­i­ty to raise any short-term fund­ing.

Cari­CRIS has warned that it could be fur­ther low­ered if Ni­Quan does not suc­cess­ful­ly re­fi­nance its short-term debt by the end of the year.

Cari­CRIS said the low­er­ing of the as­signed rat­ings re­flects Ni­Quan’s in­abil­i­ty to at­tain full com­mer­cial op­er­a­tions at the name­plate ca­pac­i­ty by Sep­tem­ber 30, 2023, (iden­ti­fied as a fac­tor that could lead to a low­er­ing of the rat­ing in their March 2023 re­port) and the ter­mi­na­tion of the gas sales con­tract by Trinidad and To­ba­go Up­stream Down­stream En­er­gy Op­er­a­tions Com­pa­ny Lim­it­ed (TTUDEO­CL) and which has be­come sub­ject to le­gal pro­ceed­ings by Ni­Quan.

Cari­CRIS said it will con­sid­er re­vis­ing its rat­ings up­ward if Ni­Quan can re­sume a long-term GSC, to­geth­er with suc­cess­ful re­fi­nanc­ing of the ex­ist­ing Short-Term Note In­stru­ments (STNI) in­to a longer-term fa­cil­i­ty.

 “We may, how­ev­er, fur­ther low­er the rat­ings if the STNI is not re­fi­nanced or ex­tend­ed by De­cem­ber 31, 2023, or if any oth­er cred­it neg­a­tive events oc­cur be­fore that date,” it had warned.

On March 16, 2023, Cari­CRIS not­ed that if Ni­Quan was not able to achieve op­ti­mal pro­duc­tion by June 30, 2023, it would af­fect its abil­i­ty to re­fi­nance the ex­ist­ing notes or ob­tain ap­proval for a fur­ther ex­ten­sion by note­hold­ers by Ju­ly 31, 2023.

It not­ed that the in­abil­i­ty to achieve cer­ti­fi­ca­tion of the full name­plate ca­pac­i­ty of 2,400 bar­rels per day “ad­verse­ly im­pact­ed the Com­pa­ny’s abil­i­ty to se­cure time­ly re­fi­nanc­ing.”

At that time, it not­ed that in De­cem­ber 2022, Ni­Quan’s to­tal debt stood at US $218.7 mil­lion, a 416.6 per cent in­crease from 2018 and is pro­ject­ed to fur­ther in­crease to US $312 mil­lion as of De­cem­ber 2023.

The June 15 ac­ci­dent at the plant which even­tu­al­ly led to the death of 35-year-old pipe fit­ter Al­lan­lane Ramkissoon, and the sub­se­quent clo­sure of the plant for in­ves­ti­ga­tions by the Oc­cu­pa­tion­al Safe­ty and Health Agency and the Min­istry of En­er­gy and En­er­gy In­dus­tries (MEEI) af­fect­ed the com­pa­ny’s abil­i­ty to re-fi­nance its debt which was set for Ju­ly 31.

Gill fights back

How­ev­er, Ni­Quan founder and chief vi­sion­ary of­fi­cer Ains­ley Gill is fight­ing back claim­ing ir­reg­u­lar­i­ties in the ex­tra­or­di­nary res­o­lu­tions passed on No­vem­ber 7.

In a let­ter to RBL, Gill said that Ni­Quan was not in­clud­ed in the dis­cus­sions among note­hold­ers and was not al­lowed to state its case.

In his let­ter, he not­ed the Steer­ing Com­mit­tee’s plans to re-en­gage to get a nat­ur­al gas con­tract and to ne­go­ti­ate with Her­itage on its off-take prod­uct as er­ro­neous giv­en that note­hold­ers were not in­clud­ed in these con­tracts.

How­ev­er, the Sun­day Guardian un­der­stands that Ni­Quan’s agree­ment is with Paria.

Gill ar­gued that note­hold­ers did not have enough in­for­ma­tion to pass such a res­o­lu­tion and asked RBL to re­voke the No­vem­ber 7 res­o­lu­tion.

In ad­di­tion, he re­quest­ed the of­fi­cial vot­ing re­sults.

In lieu of that, the RBL called an­oth­er note­hold­er meet­ing and in­clud­ed Ni­Quan.

Since Oc­to­ber 18, fi­nanciers have been try­ing to change the com­pa­ny’s man­age­ment in a bid to save the plant and tried to re­move Gill from the helm of the project giv­en the ter­mi­na­tion of the nat­ur­al gas con­tract with the TTUDEO­CL which has ren­dered the plant pur­pose­less.

The Sun­day Guardian re­port­ed it was Gill’s de­ci­sion to seek an in­junc­tion against TTUDECOL for the sup­ply of nat­ur­al gas as op­posed to seek­ing out ar­bi­tra­tion which sig­nalled a break­ing point for the project.

How­ev­er, Gill is the largest share­hold­er of the com­pa­ny.

For­mer fi­nanciers, who have pumped hun­dreds of mil­lions in­to the project, be­lieve that Gill’s le­gal bat­tles with for­mer ex­ec­u­tives have cost the com­pa­ny from a rep­u­ta­tion­al per­spec­tive–for­mer in­de­pen­dent sen­a­tor David Small, a for­mer vice pres­i­dent for Ni­Quan En­er­gy was award­ed $20,647,017 mil­lion for breach of con­tract for monies owed to him dur­ing his em­ploy­ment. In 2021, Eber­hard Lucke, for­mer vice pres­i­dent of Process En­gi­neer­ing and Tech­nol­o­gy sued the com­pa­ny in the Har­ris Coun­ty court in Texas, for sums owed to him–US$368,793. On Jan­u­ary 6, 2022, he won his mat­ter and was award­ed US$435,000 by the court, but to date, Ni­Quan has on­ly paid 45 per cent of the sums owed to Lucke.

As it stands, the com­pa­ny’s le­gal chal­lenges come amid fi­nan­cial prob­lems plagu­ing the com­pa­ny–it’s close to US$300 mil­lion in debt–and has gone of­fline as a re­sult of no per­mis­sion to op­er­ate from the Min­istry of En­er­gy and En­er­gy In­dus­tries (MEEI) and no nat­ur­al gas con­tract in place.

Ni­Quan raised mon­ey on the in­ter­na­tion­al bond mar­ket, loans and sums from lo­cal in­vestors which in­clude Re­pub­lic Bank Ltd, RBC Trust (Trinidad and To­ba­go) Ltd, Bea­con In­sur­ance Com­pa­ny, First­line Se­cu­ri­ties, Prime Cap­i­tal Ltd, JMMB Se­cu­ri­ties Ltd, Wa­ter­loo Cap­i­tal Ad­vi­sors, KCL Cap­i­tal Mar­ket Bro­kers Ltd, In­shal­lah In­vest­ments, Farm Chem En­gi­neer­ing  Man­age­ment Ltd, GM Homes Ltd, M&J Ser­vices Ltd, Cen­tral Fi­nance Fa­cil­i­ty Co­op­er­a­tive So­ci­ety of Trinidad and To­ba­go Ltd, Petrotrin and Wash­ing­ton DC reg­is­tered, Ni­Quan En­er­gy LLC.

Ni­Quan has had five ex­ten­sions to re­pay its first bond as it met with chal­lenges try­ing to get the plant, which at one point was rel­e­gat­ed to scrap met­al, up and op­er­a­tional. Those chal­lenges were ex­ac­er­bat­ed by the COVID-19 pan­dem­ic.

Ni­Quan de­clined to com­ment to the Sun­day Guardian.

How­ev­er, the com­pa­ny has ap­pealed Jus­tice Kevin Ram­cha­ran’s Au­gust 21 de­ci­sion which de­nied Ni­Quan an in­junc­tion to com­pel the State to sup­ply nat­ur­al gas to the plant.

On Sep­tem­ber 22, Ni­Quan’s chair­man John An­drews, in a news­pa­per ad­ver­tise­ment, asked the Gov­ern­ment to up­hold the “sanc­ti­ty of con­tract” even though no con­tract ex­ists be­tween the com­pa­ny and the State.


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