Banpu Explained

Banpu Public Company Limited
Type:Public
Foundation:[1]
Location City:Bangkok
Location Country:Thailand
Key People:Somruedee Chaimongkol (CEO)
Industry:Energy
Products:Coal
Electrical power
Revenue: 123,345 million baht (2018)
Net Income: 6,694 million baht (2018)
Assets: 274,317 million baht (2018)
Equity: 83,060 million baht (2018)
Num Employees:6,037 (2018)
Subsid:Banpu Power

Banpu Public Company Limited is an energy company based in Thailand. Its three core businesses are energy resources (coal and gas); energy generation (conventional and renewable); and energy technology (wind and solar solutions, storage systems, and energy technologies).[2] Banpu is headed by CEO Somruedee Chaimongkol.[3] In the 2012 Forbes Global 2000, Banpu was ranked as the 1707th -largest public company in the world. [4]

History

Banpu was founded by members of the Vongkusolkit and Auapinyakul families on 16 May 1983 as Ban Pu Coal Company Limited. The company was created to subcontract a coal mining operation at Banpu Mine (BP-1 Mine) in Li District, Lamphun Province. On 4 May 1989, Banpu was listed on the Stock Exchange of Thailand (SET). Its name was changed on 29 July 1993 to Banpu Public Company Limited.[2]

In 2005, Banpu entered into a joint venture with Thai-Lao Lignite Co., Ltd. and Hong Sa Lignite (Lao PDR) Co., Ltd. to develop the project, but this agreement was terminated in 2006. A UNCITRAL arbitration found that the Lao government illegally terminated concession and ordered Laos to pay US$57 million in damages plus interest. Laos is refusing to pay.

In 2010 Banpu bought the Australian mining company Centennial Coal.

Current CEO of Banpu Somruedee Chaimongkol assumed the position on 10 April 2015.

Banpu decided to launch a new corporate branding attributes in 2018, the "Banpu Heart".

Operations

Power generation

Banpu Power Public Company Limited or Banpu Power (BPP) was established in 1996 (then named "Cogeneration PLC") as a subsidiary of Banpu PCL.[5] BPP's generating capacity as of early-2019 is 2,140 megawatts. Its goal is to expand that number to 4,300 MW by 2025. Renewable power projects account for 20 percent of BPP-generated electricity.[6]

Coal mining

It is the largest coal producer in Thailand and also has coal mining operations in Indonesia and China, and coal-fired power generation operations in Thailand and China. Banpu plans also to invest in the Hong Sa lignite mine and power plant project in Laos.[7]

Banpu's main coal resources are in Indonesia (26 million tonnes), Australia (14 million tonnes), and China (4.7 million tonnes). It expects its sales to rise to 45 million tonnes in 2018, up from 42 million tonnes in 2017.[8]

Due to its coal mining operations, Banpu was named on a 2019 list of the 100 companies "...responsible for most of the world's greenhouse gas emissions".[9]

Centennial Coal

Centennial Coal Company Ltd operates five mines in New South Wales (NSW) supplying coal for export and approximately 40 percent of NSW's coal-fired electricity.[10] The company sells approximately 40 percent of its coal to export markets, primarily for use in power stations and steel mills in Japan, Korea, Taiwan and Europe.[10]

Centennial Coal has been responsible for more than 900 pollution notices between 2000 and 2013 from the NSW Environment Protection Authority (EPA). In 2015 it was responsible for a major release of coal fines into the Wollangambe River and World Heritage listed areas of the Blue Mountains National Park.[11] Centennial Coal has been dumping mine effluent into the Wollangambe River for approximately 30 years, effectively killing large sections of it.[12] Between 2000-2015, Centennial's Clarence Colliery has been cited for more than 65 non-compliance breaches of its licence.[13] As of 2015, Centennial Coal has applied to extend the Springvale Mine, undermining swamps of "National Environmental Significance"[14] and dumping up to 50 million litres a day of mine effluent into the Coxs River which also flows through the Blue Mountains World Heritage area and into Sydney's drinking water catchments.[15]

Banpu NEXT

Formed in 2019 as a joint venture between Banpu and Banpu Power (BPP), Banpu NEXT is the company's energy technology division.[16] The division is targeted towards providing energy solutions for storage systems, battery-powered electric vehicles, energy efficiency management, and smart city projects.[17] [18]

Corporate issues

Financials

Banpu reported revenues of 123,345 million baht for its fiscal year ending 31 December 2018. Net income was 6,694 million baht, total assets 274,312 million baht, and total equity 83,060 million baht.[19] Banpu's coal business accounted for 87% of its revenues for the year.

As of 31 December 2018, Banpu employed 6,037 persons, nearly half of them at its coal operations in Indonesia. Banpu employed 383 persons in Thailand, 6% of its workforce.

Remuneration of the twelve directors on the Banpu board totaled 48 million baht. The eight senior managers earned 110 million baht in salary and bonuses.

Recognition

Banpu has been selected for a fifth consecutive year as a member of the Dow Jones Sustainability Indices (DJSI). It was ranked Gold Class in the Coal and Consumable Fuel sector by Robeco Sustainable Asset Management. Banpu also received the Sustainability Awards Honor and was listed as a Thailand Sustainability Investment (THSI) by the Stock Exchange of Thailand.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: BANPU Company Summary. The Stock Exchange of Thailand. 9 November 2011. 1 April 2012. https://web.archive.org/web/20120401030848/http://www.set.or.th/set/factsheet.do?symbol=BANPU. dead.
  2. Book: Annual Report 2018 . 2019 . Banpu Public Company Limited . 15 May 2019.
  3. Web site: Board of Directors . Banpu . 15 May 2019.
  4. Web site: Forbes Global 2000 . . 31 October 2020.
  5. Web site: Corporate Profile . Banpu Power (BPP) . 2019-02-09.
  6. News: Praiwan . Yuthana . BPP boss enjoys the privilege of pressure . 2019-02-09 . Bangkok Post . 2019-02-09.
  7. Web site: The Nation . Banpu Power seeks partner for Lao plant . 2007-03-31 . 2008-03-09.
  8. News: Praiwan . Yuthana . Banpu predicts strong coal price . 19 August 2018 . Bangkok Post . 18 August 2018.
  9. Web site: Names and Locations of the Top 100 People Killing the Planet . The Decolonial Atlas . 28 April 2019 . 15 May 2019.
  10. Web site: About Us; Who we are. Centennial Coal. 18 September 2015.
  11. Web site: Clean up progressing for Wollangambe. NSW EPA. New South Wales Environment Protection Authority. 18 September 2015. 2015-07-31.
  12. Belmer. Nakia. Tippler. Carl. Davies. Peter J.. Wright. Ian A.. Impact of a coal mine waste discharge on water quality and aquatic ecosystems in the Blue Mountains World Heritage area. Proceedings of the 7th Australian Stream Management Conference. 18 September 2015.
  13. News: Tan. Monica. Coal miner's toxic wastes killing aquatic life in protected Blue Mountains river. 4 January 2017. The Guardian. 2015-06-05.
  14. Web site: Muir. Keith. The Perversion of National Heritage Protection Threatened heritage subversion—Centennial Coal's swamp scam. The Colong Foundation for Wilderness Ltd. 18 September 2015.
  15. Web site: Court action to stop Springvale Mine polluting the Coxs River. The Colong Foundation for Wilderness Ltd. 4 January 2017.
  16. News: . Banpu Next focuses on technology . Bangkok Post . 2022-06-20.
  17. Web site: 2021-01-22 . Banpu NEXT takes first step towards turning Phuket into 'smart, liveable city' . 2022-06-20 . nationthailand . en.
  18. News: . Banpu adds to green energy portfolio . Bangkok Post . 2022-06-20.
  19. Web site: BANPU : BANPU PUBLIC COMPANY LIMITED . Stock Exchange of Thailand (SET) . 15 May 2019.