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Puerto Rico's Board and Utility Creditors Are at Odds Over Energy Tariffs

Submitted by jhartgen@abi.org on

Puerto Rico’s financial oversight board says it’s still at odds with creditors of the island’s bankrupt power company over how much businesses and residents can afford to pay for electricity, Bloomberg News reported. An “impasse” over energy tariffs is responsible for a recent collapse in negotiations to restructure Puerto Rico Electric Power Authority’s $9 billion in debt, said Prof. David Skeel, chairman of the federally appointed Financial Oversight and Management Board. “The oversight board has been carefully, carefully analyzing what residents and businesses can afford to pay for electricity,” Skeel said at a public meeting Friday. “Any restructuring is going to be based on that analysis.” The company, called Prepa, and a group of ad hoc bondholders have been locked in court-ordered mediation to reduce debt while also litigating to how much of the utility’s revenue bondholders are entitled. The oversight board, which is managing Prepa’s bankruptcy, has until Dec. 1 to file a new debt restructuring proposal to the court. Skeel called on Friday for a “responsible restructuring” that also addresses the rights of both Puerto Rico’s residents and creditors. Puerto Rico has some of the most expensive and least reliable energy of any U.S. jurisdiction. When Hurricane Fiona clipped the western edge of the island as a Category 1 hurricane last month, it knocked out power to the entire island. Puerto Rico’s private grid operator says it has restored power to 99% of clients — a figure that has been disputed by some mayors and community groups.

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