The ambitious Sun Cable renewable energy project has collapsed into administration after billionaires Mike Cannon-Brookes and Andrew Forrest were unable to agree on a path forward for the $25 billion business.
Administrators from US financial services firm FTI Consulting were appointed to the business on Wednesday. In a statement, the company said the appointment was due to an “absence of alignment with the objectives of all shareholders”.
“Whilst funding proposals were provided, consensus on the future direction and funding structure of the company could not be achieved,” a statement from Sun Cable said.
Sources close to the business who were not authorised to speak publicly on the issue said the impasse was between Cannon-Brookes and Forrest, who had clashing ideas on ways to prop up Sun Cable after the project missed a key milestone in September and was bleeding cash.
Forrest’s Squadron Energy and Cannon-Brookes’ Grok Ventures were willing to invest additional capital in the business, sources said, but the two could not agree on terms, leaving them at loggerheads. The majority of shareholders reportedly supported Grok’s plan, however as both major shareholders have veto rights, the board was unable to get the deal over the line.
Both Squadron and Grok led Sun Cable’s most recent funding round in March, which raised $210 million which was supposed to keep the business funded until late 2023.
‘I’m confident it [Sun Cable] will play a huge role in delivering green energy for the world, right here from Australia.’
Mike Cannon-Brookes
Sun Cable was founded in 2018 and planned to send solar-powered renewable energy via an undersea cable from the Northern Territory to Singapore. The operation was valued at about $25 billion and had attracted widespread support from investors and the federal government, with Prime Minister Anthony Albanese last year labelling it an exciting project.
Vying to be the world’s first intercontinental electricity grid, Sun Cable had planned to develop a 4200-kilometre underwater transmission line that would transmit solar power generated in the Northern Territory to Singapore, which could have met up to 15 per cent of Singapore’s demand.
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