BSS
  07 Mar 2022, 10:53

Australian power firm rejects green billionaire's takeover bid

   SYDNEY, March 7, 2022 (BSS/AFP) - Australia's biggest carbon emitter AGL

said Monday it had rejected an upped takeover bid from billionaire green
activist Mike Cannon-Brookes, who wanted to shutter the energy firm's coal-
fired power plants.

   AGL -- Australia's largest energy company -- said its board had over the
weekend rejected a joint bid of $8.25 (US$6) per share from Cannon-Brookes,
founder of the tech firm Atlassian, and the Canadian investment giant
Brookfield Asset Management.

   The firm said in a statement to the Australian stock exchange that the
buyout proposal was still "well below the fair value of the company".

   The failed bid marked the second offer Cannon-Brookes and Brookfield had
put to AGL -- up from $7.50 per share previously -- with a plan to close the
company's major coal-fired power plants 15 years early.

   Cannon-Brookes had already revealed the AGL rejection on Sunday, declaring
"with great sadness" that the bid, worth about $8.5 billion with AGL's debt,
would be the pair's final offer to take the energy firm private.

   "Our path was the world's biggest decarbonisation project," Cannon-Brookes
said on Twitter.

   Since becoming one of Australia's richest people, worth an estimated US$16
billion, Cannon-Brookes has been outspoken about the need to do more to
decarbonise the country's economy and set ambitious climate goals.

   If successful, Cannon-Brookes and Brookfield had planned to rapidly
decarbonise AGL, including by shutting its coal power plants by 2030 --
rather than 2045 as currently slated.

   In its statement to the stock exchange, AGL said it would instead pursue a
demerger of the gas and energy parts of its business, a plan that has been
met with doubts from some of its key shareholders.

   Australia is one of the world's largest exporters of both gas and coal,
but the country has also been on the sharp end of climate change, with
droughts, deadly bushfires and bleaching events on the Great Barrier Reef
becoming more common and more intense as global climate patterns change.