Australian tech tycoon nears rescue of US$20 billion solar project to send power to Singapore

Published Thu, May 25, 2023 · 04:57 PM

A CONSORTIUM led by billionaire Mike Cannon-Brookes, which includes Quinbrook Infrastructure Partners, is in final talks to acquire collapsed solar megaproject Sun Cable, people with knowledge of the matter said.

The technology tycoon’s family office, Grok Ventures, is nearing a deal with FTI Consulting, administrators for Sun Cable, after vying for the asset against Squadron Energy, said the sources.

Deliberations are ongoing and there is no certainty they will result in a deal, the sources said, asking not to be identified discussing confidential information. Representatives for Grok and Quinbrook declined to comment; spokespeople for Squadron and FTI didn’t immediately respond to requests for comment.

News of the talks were reported earlier on Thursday by The Australian.

Sun Cable is an A$30 billion (S$26.5 billion) project to build Australia’s largest solar farm and transmit the power by subsea cable to Singapore. Both Cannon-Brookes and Andrew Forrest, a mining billionaire who owns Squadron, had invested in the startup. 

But Sun Cable entered into voluntary administration in January after its shareholders failed to reach consensus on its future direction and funding. FTI appointed MA Moelis Australia as an adviser soon after, as it planned to take to take binding offers for a recapitalisation of the firm.

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The collapse of Sun Cable has become a turning point for Cannon-Brookes and Forrest, former allies who are now backing different approaches to Australia’s green energy transition. Forrest, founder of iron-ore miner Fortescue Metals Group, assembled Australia’s largest renewables platform with Squadron after purchasing developer CWP Renewables late last year. Cannon-Brookes, founder of software firm Atlassian Corp, has turned to shareholder activism, haranguing utility AGL Energy over its plans to exit coal power.

Forrest is a proponent of developing an export industry for green hydrogen from Australia to energy-hungry Asian countries, while Cannon-Brookes continues to believe in the viability of Sun Cable’s plan to use undersea cabling to transmit solar power. BLOOMBERG

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