Trustpower Ltd v Commissioner of Inland Revenue

Case

[2013] NZHC 2970

12 November 2013

No judgment structure available for this case.

For a Court ready (fee required) version please follow this link

IN THE HIGH COURT OF NEW ZEALAND AUCKLAND REGISTRY

CIV 2011-404-007140 [2013] NZHC 2970

UNDER  the Taxation Administration Act 1994

IN THE MATTER             of the Income Tax Act 2004

BETWEEN  TRUSTPOWER LIMITED Plaintiff

ANDTHE COMMISSIONER OF INLAND REVENUE

Defendant

Hearing:                   12-30 August 2013

Appearances:           G J Harley, S Armstrong, L Hablous and A F Church for

Plaintiff
D H McLellan QC, M Andrews, R Roff and C Kern for
Defendant

Judgment:                12 November 2013  at 10am

(RESERVED) JUDGMENT OF ANDREWS J

This judgment is delivered by me on 12 November 2013 at 10am pursuant to r 11.5 of the High Court Rules.

..................................................... Registrar / Deputy Registrar

Solicitors/Counsel:

Russell McVeagh, Auckland
G J Harley, Barrister, Wellington

D H McLellan QC, Barrister, Auckland

Crown Law, Wellington

Inland Revenue Department, Wellington

TRUSTPOWER LIMITED v THE COMMISSIONER OF INLAND REVENUE [2013] NZHC 2970 [12

November 2013 ]

Table of Contents

Introduction ..........................................................................................................[1]

A history of the dispute ........................................................................................[7] The development pipeline in more detail – feasibility investigation..............[16] What are the issues?

The pleadings .......................................................................................................[30]

Matters not pleaded..............................................................................................[35] Issues emerging in closing submissions ...............................................................[41] The “general permission” and the “capital limitation” ..................................[42] The capital/revenue determination: overview of leading authorities ............[44] The practical and business point of view – the BP Australia indicia ...................[48] The “identifiable asset” test.................................................................................[51] Further New Zealand authorities.........................................................................[52] Resource consents and the Income Tax Act

Resource consents ................................................................................................[57]

Resource consents in the context of the Income Tax Act ......................................[62] Submissions as to the statutory context................................................................[66] Discussion ............................................................................................................[70] Are the resource consents obtained by TrustPower, on a stand-alone

basis, assets?

Introduction ..........................................................................................................[80]

Submissions ..........................................................................................................[87] Discussion ............................................................................................................[92] The BP Australia indicia ....................................................................................[98] What was the need or occasion which called for the expenditure? .....................[99] Were the payments made from fixed or circulating capital? ..............................[104] Was the expenditure of a once and for all nature producing assets or
advantages which were of an enduring benefit for TrustPower?....................... [111] (a)   Was the expenditure of a once and for all or recurrent nature?................. [113] (b)   Were the assets or advantages produced of an enduring benefit to

TrustPower? ............................................................................................... [119] How would the payment be treated on ordinary principles of commercial accounting? ........................................................................................................[126] Was the expenditure incurred on the business structure of TrustPower,

or as part of the process by which income was earned?....................................[135]

From a practical and business point of view, is the expenditure to be

regarded as capital or revenue in nature? .........................................................[139]

Was TrustPower’s expenditure in obtaining resource consent incurred

for the purposes of improving its interest in the underlying land?

Introduction ........................................................................................................[142]

Discussion ..........................................................................................................[146]

TrustPower’s alternative argument: classification of expenditure

Introduction ........................................................................................................[148]

When was TrustPower committed to filing applications for resource

consents? ............................................................................................................[151] Discussion ..........................................................................................................[154] Result .................................................................................................................[157]

Appendix

The four projects: description and chronology

1.     Arnold hydro

2.     Kaiwera Downs wind farm

3.     Mahinerangi wind farm

4.     Wairau River Hydro

Introduction

[1]      The plaintiff, TrustPower, derives its business income from selling electricity. It generates (by hydro or wind) approximately one-half of the electricity that it sells and buys the remainder.   TrustPower is New Zealand’s fourth largest retailer, and fifth largest generator, of electricity.

[2]      TrustPower seeks to maintain flexibility as to whether it generates or buys electricity, as circumstances change.  To this end, it has developed a “pipeline” of generation projects, which it refers to as “the development pipeline”, “the optionality pipeline”, or “the pipeline”.   The pipeline is intended to provide TrustPower with information as to the viability, feasibility,  and  costs of building new generation capacity, to be used when it makes decisions as to how it sources the electricity it sells.

[3]      The development pipeline comprises a number of possible wind or hydro generation projects, which are at various stages of the feasibility assessment.1   There are  always  more  projects  in  the  pipeline  than  TrustPower  has  the  financial  or resource capability to construct, or are needed to supply its customers.  Nevertheless, TrustPower considers the pipeline to be essential, to provide sufficient detailed and robust information on which it can assess the relative merits of whether to “build” or “buy”.  TrustPower describes the development pipeline as providing it with a suite of options as to whether to build generation capacity, or buy electricity to sell.

[4]      Some projects are progressed through the pipeline to the stage of applying for various consents (for example, land use consents, water permits, and discharge permits) under the Resource Management Act 1991 (“the RMA”).   In the period between  July 2005  and  November  2007,  TrustPower  applied  for,  and  obtained, consents (“the resource consents”) in respect of four projects: Arnold River hydro on the west coast of the South Island (“Arnold”), Kaiwera Downs wind farm, east of Gore,  Southland  (“Kaiwera Downs”), Mahinerangi  wind  farm,  west  of Dunedin (“Mahinerangi”), and Wairau River hydro, in Marlborough (“Wairau”).  TrustPower

refers to resource consents obtained for projects in the development pipeline as

1      At any time there are approximately 200 projects in the development pipeline.

“Type 2” consents, to distinguish them from consents relating to existing property or plant (which are “Type 1” consents).  Each of the applications for resource consents included  an  extensive  “Assessment  of  Effects  on  the  Environment”  (“AEE”), pursuant to s 88 (2) (b) and Schedule 4 of the RMA.

[5]      The primary dispute between TrustPower and the Commissioner of Inland Revenue (“the Commissioner”) is as to the nature of the expenditure (of approximately $17.7 million) TrustPower incurred in applying for and obtaining the “Type 2” resource consents in the tax years ending 31 March 2006, 2007, and 2008.2

TrustPower contends that it applied for the resource consents as part of its feasibility analysis of each project, and before it had committed to the construction of any of the projects.   For that reason, TrustPower submits that the expenditure is revenue expenditure, incurred in the course of deriving income from the generation and sale of electricity, and therefore deductible for tax purposes. The Commissioner contends that the resource consents are themselves intangible capital assets, and that from the time TrustPower was committed to applying for the consents, the expenditure incurred in obtaining them is capital expenditure, and therefore not deductible.

[6]      If the expenditure is held to be capital, then two secondary issues arise:  first, at what time the expenditure ceased to be “revenue” and became “capital” in nature, and secondly, whether (after that point) the Commissioner correctly allocated particular expenditure as capital rather than revenue.

A history of the dispute

[7]      TrustPower claimed that its expenditure in respect of each of the proposed Arnold, Kaiwera Downs, Mahinerangi, and Wairau projects was deductible as “feasibility expenditure” pursuant to the “general permission” in s DA 1(1) of the Income  Tax  Act  2004  (“the  ITA  2004”).3    On  31  March  2010  (for  Arnold,

Mahinerangi, and Wairau) and 22 June 2010 (for Kaiwera Downs) the Commissioner

2      The exact figure in dispute was agreed between the parties to be $17,672,290 (as noted in a schedule provided to the Court on 30 August 2013). TrustPower does not claim that expenditure relating to its “Type 1” consents is revenue in nature.

3      The Income Tax Act 2004 applies in this case rather than its replacement, the Income Tax Act

2007.

issued Notices of Proposed Adjustments disallowing the deductions for the tax years ending 31 March 2006, 2007, and 2008.

[8]      The reason given by the Commissioner for disallowing the deductions was that the expenditure was capital in nature, because it was incurred for the purpose of developing and acquiring a capital asset, namely, the four proposed projects. Expenditure that is of a capital nature cannot be deducted, pursuant to s DA 2(1) of the ITA 2004 (“the capital limitation”).

[9]      TrustPower then began the challenge procedures pursuant to s 138B(1) of the Tax Administration Act 1994. The dispute was referred to the adjudication unit of Inland Revenue.  At the time the adjudication unit was considering the matter, the time bar for the 2006 year was due to expire on 31 March 2011.  The adjudication unit was not able to give a decision within time, notwithstanding an extension by agreement.  The assessment for the 2006 tax year was therefore returned to Inland Revenue’s service delivery group.

[10]     On 28 September 2011, the Commissioner issued an amended assessment for the 2006 tax year, disallowing TrustPower’s claimed deductions for feasibility expenditure for that year.

[11]     On 17 October 2011, the adjudication unit issued a report in respect of the

2007  and  2008  tax  years  (“the  adjudication  decision”).    The  adjudication  unit decided that, because TrustPower had not committed to proceed with the acquisition or development of any of the proposed projects (in that the Board had not made a formal documented decision to proceed) in any of the relevant tax years, the expenditure was not capital in nature.  Rather, it was feasibility expenditure, incurred in order to “weigh up” whether to proceed with the project.

[12]     Despite determining that, when considered within the projects to which they related,  the  resource  consents  were  part  of  the  feasibility  expenditure,  the adjudication unit went on to consider whether the resource consents were stand- alone assets and, if so, whether they were capital or revenue assets.  It concluded that the resource consents could be either capital or revenue assets, depending on the

facts, but would in most cases be capital.   The adjudication unit was not able to determine which consents were of a capital nature, and was not able to allocate costs between “mere feasibility expenditure” and “what constitutes the cost of the capital assets”.  The dispute was therefore returned to the service delivery group “to make necessary adjustments resulting from the above conclusions”.

[13]     On 29 March 2012, the Commissioner issued a “re-assessment letter”.  The Commissioner said that the resource consents for the four projects were “long life consents”, and therefore would provide an enduring benefit to TrustPower.  As such, the Commissioner said, they are capital assets and the costs incurred in obtaining them are of a capital nature.   The Commissioner also said that from the time TrustPower commenced the resource consent process for a particular project, any costs incurred for the purpose of obtaining resource consents (as part of that process) were properly treated as resource consent costs of a capital nature rather than as feasibility costs.

[14]     The  Commissioner  concluded  that  expenditure  of  approximately  $17.7 million associated with resource consent applications during the 2006, 2007, and

2008 tax years was capital in nature.  The deductions claimed by TrustPower were therefore disallowed.

[15]     TrustPower issued this proceeding on 8 November 2011, challenging the Commissioner’s  amended  assessment  in  respect  of  the  2006  tax  year,  only. Following the receipt of the re-assessment for the 2007 and 2008 tax years, TrustPower filed an amended statement of claim on 25 May 2012, which challenges the Commissioner’s re-assessment in respect of each of the 2006, 2007, and 2008 tax years.

The development pipeline in more detail – feasibility investigation

[16]     In  his  evidence  for TrustPower,  Dr Harker,  Chairman of the TrustPower Board of Directors, said that the pipeline of generation projects was developed to enable TrustPower to develop new generation projects as and when profitable.  Dr Harker referred  to  a “Generation  Development  Plan” presented to  the Board in October 2002, which summarised the pipeline approach:

TrustPower Limited has identified a number of generation project opportunities both related to the enhancement of existing assets and green field projects with potential for generation and associated infrastructure development.   The Board of TrustPower wishes to progress some of the viable opportunities into robust business cases for development by the company or for sale.

The following report identifies the key development objectives, outlines the strategy for establishing and maintaining a project pipeline, presents the current  project  portfolio  and  a  timebound  action  plan  for  progressing selected concepts into business cases.

[17]   After setting out the “key drivers” of generation development (creating shareholder wealth, progressing projects which are economically, socially, and environmentally sustainable, and the efficient use of resources to optimise returns), the Plan sets out a “development strategy”, beginning with the comment:

To achieve our goal, we need to develop and maintain a healthy concept to implementation project pipeline.  We estimate that about 3 concepts out of

10 will pass the financial and economic hurdles and progress into the feasibility stage, and only 2 or 3 of the fully appraised projects would gain

resource and land use consents and approvals required for implementation.

[18]    In his evidence for TrustPower Mr Kedian, who was General Manager, Generation at TrustPower, and responsible for overview and management of the development pipeline from 2005 to 2011, said that the pipeline:

...  consists  of  potential  development  generation  projects,  all  at  different stages in TrustPower’s feasibility process (a significant number of them are subsequently eliminated).  Projects remain in the pipeline from the time the project  is  identified  until  a  decision  is  made  by TrustPower’s  Board  to commit either to construction of the generation scheme or to abandon the project. ...

[19]     Projects  in  the  development  pipeline  are  assessed  through  a  three-step feasibility process.  The first step involves the identification of potential generation sites and a high-level evaluation of the feasibility of this site.  There are three stages within the first step.   The first stage involves identifying and evaluating potential sites (a “desktop” exercise undertaken in-house at TrustPower) and commencing discussions with affected landowners, with a view to obtaining agreements for access for  investigation  and  monitoring,  and  option  agreements  (preferably  by  way of easements) in respect of future use of the land, should the project proceed to construction. TrustPower may also consider purchasing land.

[20]     The second stage of the first feasibility step involves on-site monitoring and undertaking a high-level evaluation, to determine whether the particular project should proceed to applications for resource consents.   For the purpose of this evaluation, TrustPower “guesstimate[s]” the cost of the project, because at this stage no detailed geotechnical analysis of the site has been undertaken, and no detailed design work done.

[21]     The third and final stage of the first feasibility step, if a project passes the high-level evaluation, and if it is concluded that the project (as currently envisaged) is likely to be economically viable, is applying for resource consents.  In respect of this stage, Mr Kedian said:

3.16     The  third  stage  of  the  first  step  feasibility  process  is  the  RMA consent application.   RMA consent is necessary before a decision can be made to proceed with the second step feasibility study, being an evaluation of what can be constructed, in terms of the consented project.  This enables TrustPower to analyse  comprehensibly the  viability of  the  project in  its second step process, which contemplates detailed design and costing, so as to be able to commence the preparation of the business case for the construction of a project.

3.17     There are two aspects to this RMA consent preparation stage of the first step feasibility analysis.  First, no project can proceed to construction without RMA consent.   Secondly, until TrustPower has RMA consent, it does not know what it can construct or what limitations will be placed on the scheme  operation  and  therefore  cannot  determine whether  the  project  is viable.  ... Although detailed and specific in their own terms and framework, the RMA consents do not enable TrustPower to say “let’s go ahead and build this”.   At this time, these RMA consents reflect only in part what is a preliminary design concept.  I would estimate that at the point of making the relevant application, engineering design would be about 10% complete. This point is fundamental and requires some understanding of the engineering and design complexity of the four projects.

...

3.19     TrustPower engages external experts to carry out analysis of issues such as the impact on birds, native flora and fauna, and the noise and visual impact of the proposed project.  These studies are essential to TrustPower’s assessment of whether the project is feasible, irrespective of the RMA requirements.   However, TrustPower also knows that these things may subsequently impact its ability to obtain RMA consent.  The project ideas start out as purely engineering concepts without any consideration of the RMA requirements  in  relation  to  the  effects  on  the  environment  or  the community.   It therefore requires each external consultant to complete a “fatal flaw” analysis in order to identify up front any issues that will make the project impossible to undertake.   This occurs at an early stage in the process, before a firm decision has been made to proceed with an application

for RMA consent.   If there are no fatal flaws identified, the external consultants will continue their work (alongside the other continuing work streams) and this may all eventually form part of an application for RMA consent.

[22]     Mr Kedian further said that the “Type 2” resource consents “provide what is the outside ‘shape of the envelope’”,  for  a project  and  “the particular resource consent terms provide some of the relevant parameters”.  He went on to say that the resource consent terms are “no more useful than the wind or hydro data set.  Each is a critical component in the whole picture, but it is the whole picture that is defined in the second step feasibility analysis.”

[23]     The second step of the feasibility process, which is not undertaken until resource consents are granted, involves the development of all the identified components within the “envelope”.   The second step feasibility work includes developing the necessary civil engineering and electromechanical designs, calling for tenders from (but not committing to) manufacturers and construction companies, analysing how the scheme will be connected to the national grid or a local network, and analysing the economic feasibility of the project.

[24]     The third step of the feasibility process, if the project is considered viable after  the  second  feasibility  step,  is  the  preparation  of  a  business  case  for consideration by the Board, in which a recommendation is made to the Board as to whether the project should proceed to construction, and a capital expenditure budget approved.

[25]     The fact that a generation project is in the development pipeline does not mean that it will ultimately be constructed.   Dr Harker said in evidence that TrustPower will “postpone its own developments when it is cheaper to purchase and this postponement can be ongoing”.   Purchasing may be the better option, for example, if other competitors have better new-build options than TrustPower has, or if other generators or retailers have cheaper electricity available from over-supply. Against that, reliance on purchasing electricity from other sources  carries risks, which can be minimised if TrustPower has the ability to increase its generation capacity within a reasonably short period of time.

[26]     Dr Harker’s evidence was that “the intention of the development pipeline is to provide TrustPower with development options that can be weighed up against other options”. He said:

Development options in the pipeline are just options that enable good decisions about the source of supply to be made.   Put another way, TrustPower is investing in a “chance” with these projects.  While over the next 20 to 30 years it is possible that all projects in TrustPower’s pipeline could be built, I can say with confidence that they will not all be built by TrustPower in the next 10 years.  TrustPower will only pursue the “build” option  and  progress  a  project  in  its  development  pipeline,  where  it  is confident that this is a better use of its funds than sourcing supply through the “buy” option.   However, options in the pipeline that may not be considered to be worthwhile at a particular time help TrustPower assess the merits and value of either not seeking to increase sales, or meeting existing or new demands from other wholesale sources.

[27]     A key factor in assessing the viability of any project in the development pipeline is the impact of “HVDC charges”.  The HVDC (high voltage direct current) power line is more commonly known as the “Cook Strait cable”, and links the North and South island high voltage transmission systems (“the national grid”). A charge is imposed on South Island generators injecting electricity into the national grid.  The charge can only be avoided if, rather than being injected into the national grid, electricity from South Island generation is embedded directly into a local distribution network.  Mr Kedian’s evidence was that the HVDC charge has a fundamental effect on the economics of projects in the development pipeline.

[28]     Mr Kedian reported to the TrustPower Board each month on projects in the development pipeline.  A table setting out the pipeline was included in the Agenda papers.  The Table was divided into five sections, reflecting the stage projects had reached  in  the  development  pipeline:  “In  Final  Design/Construction  Planning Phase”, “In Consenting/Engineering Design Phase”, “Land Access/Scoping Phase”, “Preliminary Investigation Phase”, and  “Prospect Parked”.

[29]     Chronologies of progress of each  of the four projects are set out in  the Appendix to this judgment.   The chronologies were derived from an agreed chronology provided by the parties, and documents in the agreed bundle of documents.

What are the issues?

The pleadings

[30]     In the Amended Statement of Defence to TrustPower’s Amended Statement of Claim, the Commissioner put in issue (by denying or asserting having no knowledge of allegations) the majority of TrustPower’s allegations.    The Commissioner also made affirmative allegations in respect of many of TrustPower’s allegations.

[31]     In his submissions for TrustPower, Mr Harley criticised the Commissioner’s pleading as being, in various respects, unresponsive to TrustPower’s allegations, factually incorrect or misleading, and contrary to the matters and determinations set out in the adjudication decision.   Mr Harley’s objections are noted.   TrustPower’s position on these matters has been made clear in its reply to the Amended Statement of Defence,4 and in the evidence and submissions for TrustPower.

[32]     Mr Harley referred, in particular, to the Commissioner’s pleading in response to TrustPower’s allegation (at paragraph 9 of the Amended Statement of Claim) of its three-step feasibility analysis for potential new generation projects.  At paragraph 9 of the Amended Statement of Defence, the Commissioner denies the “three-step” characterisation   of   the   feasibility   analysis,   and   affirmatively   alleges   that TrustPower’s process for analysing and developing potential new electricity generation projects involved a “four phase, 24 step” process.  Mr Harley submitted that  this  was  contrary to  the  adjudication  unit’s  acceptance,  in  the  adjudication decision, of TrustPower’s characterisation of the feasibility analysis process.

[33]     Witnesses for TrustPower, Dr Harker, Mr Kedian, and Mr Campbell, all gave evidence of the three-step feasibility analysis process.  Their characterisation of the process was not challenged on behalf of the Commissioner, and no evidence was

given for the Commissioner in support of the alleged four phase 24 step process.

4      Dated  10  July  2012,  but  incorrectly  titled  “Defendant’s Amended  Statement  of  Reply  to

Plaintiff ’s Amended Statement of Defence”.

[34]     While the role and significance of applications for resource consents is an issue  for  determination,  I  have  concluded  that  there  is  no  real  issue  as  to TrustPower’s characterisation of the feasibility analysis process.   If I am wrong in that conclusion, then I accept TrustPower’s characterisation of the three-step process and reject the Commissioner’s alleged four phase 24 step process.

Matters not pleaded

[35]     Mr  Harley  also  objected  to  the  Commissioner  having,  through  various witnesses who gave evidence for the Commissioner, put in issue a number of factual issues and propositions which were not raised in the pleadings.  Again, while the objection is noted, TrustPower had the opportunity to, and did, file reply evidence, and the “new” issues were canvassed at the hearing.

[36]   Two particular matters raised at the hearing (but not pleaded) must be mentioned.  First, expert evidence was given for the Commissioner to the effect that TrustPower’s accounting treatment of the expenditure at issue in this proceeding was inaccurate, and that its financial statements were materially mis-stated and wrong. TrustPower called expert evidence in reply.  I accept Mr Harley’s submission that the Commissioner’s evidence as to the accuracy of TrustPower’s financial statements is not relevant to the matters at issue in this proceeding.  I have disregarded it in my consideration of the issues.   However, I add that having heard the evidence for TrustPower and the Commissioner, I could not conclude that TrustPower’s financial statements were materially mis-stated and wrong.

[37]     The second matter relates to the submission  made by Mr McLellan QC on behalf of the Commissioner, that expenditure in obtaining resource consents was non-deductible, for the reason that it was incurred for the purpose of improving capital assets; that is, TrustPower’s interests in the underlying land.

[38]     Mr Harley submitted that this argument could not be raised now, as it had not been  pleaded,  and  as  it  is  barred  from  being  raised  by  s 138G  of  the  Tax Administration Act.   Section 138G(1) provides that the Commissioner and a “disputant” may raise in a challenge only those matters raised in their Statements of Position.   Mr Harley submitted that the Commissioner’s Statements of Position,

while referring to “rights in relation to land” (in the context of expenditure incurred in developing the projects themselves, rather than what the resource consents provided to TrustPower) do not put forward a proposition that the resource consents are an improvement to the land.

[39]     Mr  McLellan  submitted  that  the  issue  of  whether  the  resource  consents enhance or improve land was not “new”.   He provided references to the Commissioner’s Statement of Position.   I have not found in those references any clear statement to the effect that the Commissioner was asserting that the expenditure incurred in obtaining the resource consents was of a capital nature, having been incurred for the purpose of improving or enhancing the underlying land.   Further, I accept that there is no pleading to that effect.

[40]     Accordingly, I accept Mr Harley’s submission that the argument cannot now be raised.   Notwithstanding that, Mr Harley addressed the argument in his submissions and, for that reason, the issue will be referred to later in this judgment.

Issues emerging in closing submissions

[41]     Although counsel framed the issues in different terms, there are four principal issues (each of which raises sub-issues) to be determined:

(a)      Are the resource consents obtained by TrustPower for the Arnold, Kaiwera Downs, Mahinerangi, and Wairau projects assets, on a stand- alone basis, (that is, separate from the projects to which they relate)? If the answer to this question is “no”, then because TrustPower had not committed to the projects, the expenditure it incurred in obtaining the resource consents is feasibility expenditure and therefore deductible.

(b)If, however, the resource consents are stand-alone assets, the nature of the expenditure needs to be determined.   Are the resource consents capital or revenue assets?  If the answer to this question is that they are capital assets, then the expenditure incurred in obtaining them will

not be deductible.  If the answer is that they are revenue assets, the expenditure will be deductible.

(c)      If the resource consents are capital assets, was  the Commissioner wrong in her conclusions as to the dates from which TrustPower’s expenditure was to be classified as being principally for the purpose of obtaining them (such dates being those from which the Commissioner considers that TrustPower was committed to applying for the resource consents)?

(d)If  the  Commissioner  was  correct  as  to  the  dates  from  which TrustPower was committed to applying for the resource consents, did she wrongly allocate expenditure as between feasibility expenditure, and the expenditure incurred in obtaining the resource consents?

The “general permission” and the “capital limitation”

[42]     For  taxation  purposes,  the  distinction  between  capital  expenditure  and revenue (income) expenditure is created by the ITA 2004.  Pursuant to s DA 1 (the “general permission”) expenditure which is incurred in deriving assessable income is deductible:

DA 1 General permission

Nexus with income

(1)       A person is allowed a deduction for an amount of expenditure or loss (including an amount of depreciation loss) to the extent to which the expenditure or loss is —

(a)      incurred by them in deriving —

(i)       their assessable income; or

(ii)      their excluded income; or

(iii)     a   combination   of   their   assessable   income   and excluded income; or

General permission

(2)      Subsection (1) is called the general permission.

[43]     However, pursuant to s DA 2(1) (the “capital limitation”), a deduction is not

allowed if expenditure is of a capital nature:

DA 2    General limitations

Capital limitation

(1)       A person is denied a deduction for an amount of expenditure or loss to the extent to which it is of a capital nature.  This rule is called the capital limitation.

Relationship of general limitations to general permission

(7)       Each of the general limitations in this section overrides the general permission.

The capital/revenue determination: overview of leading authorities

[44]     In his judgment in Inland Revenue Commissioners v British Salmson Aero Engines Ltd (“British Salmson”) (concerning whether a royalty payment made by a user  of  a  patent  was  a  capital  or  income  payment),  Sir  Wilfred  Greene  MR observed:5

There … have been … many cases where this matter of capital or income has been debated.  There have been many cases which fall on the border- line.  Indeed, in many cases it is almost true to say that the spin of a coin would  decide  the  matter  almost  as  satisfactorily  as  an  attempt  to  find reasons.

[45]     Templeman J  expressed  a  similarly  pessimistic  view  in  his  judgment  in Tucker (Inspector of Taxes) v Granada Motorway Services Ltd (“Granada Motorway Services”), concerning a payment made to secure modifications of rent obligations under a lease.6   His Honour said:7

The  forensic  field  of  conflict  involved  in  this  appeal  [as  to  whether  a payment to secure a more favourable lease was of a capital or revenue nature] is an intellectual minefield in which the principles are elusive …, analogies are treacherous …, precedents appear to be vague signposts pointing in different directions …, and the direction finder is said to be “judicial  common  sense”  …  The  practice  of  judicial  common  sense  is difficult in Revenue cases.

(References omitted)

[46]     Despite this pessimism, the courts have formulated and discussed tests for classifying expenditure as being on capital or revenue account.   In Hallstroms Pty

5      Inland Revenue Commissioners v British Salmson Aero Engines Ltd [1938] 2 KB 482 (CA) at

498.

6      Tucker (Inspector of Taxes) v Granada Motorway Services Ltd (1979) 53 TC 92 (ChD).

7      At 96–97.

Ltd v Federal Commissioner of Taxation (“Hallstroms”), Dixon J referred to Sir

Wilfred Greene’s observation in British Salmson, but was:8

… not prepared to concede that the distinction between an expenditure on account of revenue and an outgoing of a capital nature is so indefinite and uncertain as to remove the matter from the operation of reason and place it exclusively within that of chance, or that the discrimen is so unascertainable that it must be placed in the category of an unformulated question of fact.

[47]     His Honour went on to say:9

What is  an  outgoing  of  capital  and  what  is  an  outgoing  on  account  of revenue depends on what the expenditure is calculated  to effect from a practical   and   business   point   of   view,   rather   than   upon   the  juristic classification of the legal rights, if any, secured, employed or exhausted in the process.

The practical and business point of view – the BP Australia indicia

[48]     In  giving  the  judgment  of  the  Privy  Council  in  BP  Australia  Ltd  v Commissioner of Taxation for the Commonwealth of Australia  (“BP Australia”) (concerning whether a payment to service station proprietors as consideration for the proprietors’ agreement  to  sell  one  brand  of  petrol,  exclusively,  was  capital  or revenue), Lord Pearce said in relation to the approach to be taken to the capital/revenue determination:10

The  solution  to  the  problem  is  not  to  be  found  by  any  rigid  test  or description.   It has to be derived from many aspects of the whole set of circumstances some of which may point in one direction, some in the other. One consideration may point so clearly that it dominates other and vaguer indications in the contrary direction.  It is a common sense appreciation of all the guiding features which must provide the ultimate answer.  Although the categories of capital and income expenditure are distinct and easily ascertainable in obvious cases that lie far from the boundary, the line of distinction is often hard to draw in border line cases; and conflicting considerations may produce a situation where the answer turns on questions of emphasis and degree. That answer:

“depends on what the expenditure is calculated to effect from a practical and business point of view, rather than upon the juristic classification of the legal rights, if any, secured, employed or exhausted in the process”

8      Hallstroms Pty Ltd v Federal Commissioner of Taxation (1946) 72 CLR 634 at 646.

9      At 648.

10     BP Australia Ltd v Commissioner of Taxation for the Commonwealth of Australia [1966] AC 224 (PC) at 264–265.

As each new case comes to be argued felicitous phrases from earlier judgments are used in argument by one side and the other.  But those phrases are not the deciding factor, nor are they of unlimited application.   They merely  crystallise  particular  factors  which  may  incline  the  scale  in  a particular case after a balance of all the considerations has been taken.

(Citation for Hallstroms omitted)

[49]   The analysis in BP Australia has been endorsed in New Zealand. In Commissioner of Inland Revenue v McKenzies (NZ) Ltd (“McKenzies”), the Court of Appeal considered whether a payment to secure the surrender of a lease was of a capital or revenue nature.11    Delivering the judgment of the Court (holding that the payment was capital), Richardson J set out the observations of Lord Pearce in BP Australia as to the capital/revenue determination, then went on to say:12

Amongst the factors weighed by the judicial committee in BP Australia were: (a) the need or occasion which called for the expenditure; (b) whether the payments were made from fixed or circulating capital; (c) whether the payments were of a once and for all nature producing assets or advantages which were an enduring benefit; (d) how the payment would be treated on ordinary principles of commercial accounting; and (e) whether the payments were expended on the business structure of the tax payer or whether they were part of the process by which income was earned.

His Honour said that it was “a matter of analysing the particular transaction ... by reference to the legal arrangements entered into and carried out and taking into account surrounding circumstances”.13

[50]   More recently, the Privy Council endorsed the BP Australia indicia in Commissioner of Inland Revenue v Wattie (in relation to a determination whether an incentive  payment  for  entry into  a  lease  was  capital  or  revenue).14      The  Privy Council noted that the BP Australia indicia had been described by Richardson J in Commissioner of Inland Revenue v Thomas Borthwick & Sons (Australasia) Ltd as

exemplifying the “governing approach” in New Zealand.15

11     Commissioner of Inland Revenue v McKenzies (NZ) Ltd [1988] 2 NZLR 736 (CA).

12     At 740.

13     At 742.

14     Commissioner of Inland Revenue v Wattie [1999] 1 NZLR 529 (PC).

15     Commissioner of Inland Revenue v Thomas Borthwick & Sons (Australasia) Ltd (1992) 16

TRNZ 777 (CA) at 779.

The “identifiable asset” test

[51]     The  decision  of  Templeman  J  in  Granada  Motorway  Services  that  the payment was capital expenditure was upheld by the Court of Appeal and the House of Lords.   In the House of Lords, Lord Wilberforce set out what has since been referred to as the “identifiable asset” test.  His Lordship said:16

On the one hand the payment was designed to enable the Company to earn more profits: from this point of view it might be thought that the payment should have a revenue character.  On the other hand, the payment produced a modification in the lease, which could be regarded as an identifiable asset, making the lease less disadvantageous: from this point of view it might be thought that the payment should be regarded as a capital payment.   It is common in cases which raise the question whether a payment is to be treated as a revenue or capital payment for indicia to point different ways.  In the end the courts can do little better than form an opinion which way the balance lies.  There are a number of tests which have been stated in reported cases which it is useful to apply, but we have been warned more than once not to seek automatically to apply to one case words or formulae which have been found useful in another ...   I think the key to the present case is to be found in those cases which have sought to identify an asset.   In them it seems reasonably logical to start with the assumption that money spent on the acquisition of the asset should be regarded as capital expenditure. ...

Later in his judgment, Lord Wilberforce said of the identifiable asset test:17

The test may be to some extent arbitrary, but it provides a means which the courts can understand for distinguishing capital and income expenditure and I think that we would be wise to maintain it.

Further New Zealand authorities

[52]     In Buckley & Young Ltd v Commissioner of Inland Revenue (“Buckley & Young”), the Court of Appeal had to decide whether payments to a departing director of the company were of a capital or revenue character.18   The director agreed to leave the company, and entered into a restrictive covenant not to compete with, or divulge information about, the company.  In return, he was to be paid $6,000 a year, together with other payments.  In his judgment for the Court, Richardson J observed that:19

... what is involved is the fundamental distinction between the source of the income  and  the  income  earning  process;  between  capital  and  income;

16     Tucker (Inspector of Taxes) v Granada Motorway Services Ltd (HL), above n 6, at 106–107.

17     At 108.

18     Buckley & Young Ltd v Commissioner of Inland Revenue [1978] 2 NZLR 485 (CA).

19     At 488.

between expenses affecting the business structure or entity and operating expenses.  ...  [t]he  essential  question  is  as  to  the  true  character  of  the payments made and the benefits provided.  But, while that distinction is well recognised, it is equally well established that there is no single yardstick or test. ...

[53]     His   Honour   set   out   the   alternatives   on   the   opposite   sides   of   the capital/income dividing line in Buckley & Young as follows:20

A payment  made as a matter of commercial necessity or expediency to secure the removal of an unsatisfactory director or employee is referable only to the current business operations of the taxpayer in gaining its assessable income and that also stamps it with the character of a revenue and not a capital disbursement. ... But a payment made to a retiring director or employee in return for a restrictive covenant ... which has the effect of buying off competition, of its very nature affects the value of the company’s goodwill and is referable to the income earning structure rather than to the income earning process and is of a capital nature.

The Court held that the payments in question had a dual character, as being revenue (and deductible) insofar as they referred to securing the director’s retirement, and capital (and not deductible) to the extent that they referred to the restrictive covenant.

[54]    In McKenzies, Richardson J observed that in BP Australia, and in the “companion  case” involving Mobil  Oil Australia  Ltd,  the  decision  was  that  the payments were revenue payments, but in Regent Oil Co Ltd v Strick (Inspector of Taxes), delivered the same day, the House of Lords (with the same Bench) held that

the oil company’s payments were capital expenses.21   His Honour said that:22

The different result is a valuable demonstration of the importance of evaluating the facts of particular cases and recognising ... that the capital income field is an intellectual minefield in which the principles are elusive and analogies are treacherous.

(reference to Granada Motorway Services omitted)

[55]     Richardson J also referred to the identifiable asset test set out in Granada Motorway Services, and observed that Lord Wilberforce had endorsed the test in the sense that so long as the expenditure in question could be clearly referred to the

acquisition of an assets which satisfied one or other of the accepted categories, the

20     At 489.

21     Regent Oil Co Ltd v Strick (Inspector of Taxes) [1966] AC 295 (HL).

22     McKenzies, above n 11, at 741.

test must be a critical one.  However, the test would yield in cases where there were sufficient indicators pointing the other way.23

[56]     As the Court of Appeal observed in McKenzies, in uncomplicated cases, one or more factors may very clearly point to the expenditure being capital or revenue in nature, so recourse to all of the factors referred to may be unnecessary.  However, in borderline cases, it is necessary to analyse the facts as a whole, and consider which factors carry the most weight. As noted in Hallstroms, the capital/revenue decision requires considering what the expenditure was calculated to effect, from a practical

and business point of view, rather than a juristic classification of legal rights.24

Resource consents and the Income Tax Act

Resource consents

[57]     The  “Type  2”  resource  consents  obtained  by  TrustPower  were  land  use consents, water permits, and discharge permits.   Pursuant to s 9 of the RMA, a person cannot use land in a manner which contravenes a national environmental standard prescribed under s 43 of the RMA, or a rule in a district or regional plan, unless such use is either expressly permitted by the RMA, or the person is authorised to use the land in a manner which is otherwise prohibited by the RMA, national environmental standards, or a district or regional plan.   Similarly, a water consent permits a person to use water (other than in a coastal marine area) in a way which would otherwise contravene s 14 of the RMA, and a discharge consent permits a person to discharge contaminants (other than in a coastal marine area) in a way that would otherwise contravene s 15 of the RMA,

[58]     A resource consent is, therefore, permissive.  It authorises a certain land use or activity, that would otherwise be unlawful.  If the consent is exercised, it must be in accordance with any conditions imposed in the grant of the consent.  A person granted a resource consent is not required by the RMA to exercise it, but if the

consent is not exercised within its prescribed duration, it will lapse.

23     At 746.

24     Hallstroms, above n 8, at 648.

[59]     Section 88(1) of the RMA provides that “a person” may apply for a resource consent.   Thus, an application can be made for a resource consent over land the applicant does not own, or to which the applicant does not have agreed access.25

Section 88(2) provides that the application must be made in the prescribed form and manner, and must include, in accordance with Schedule 4, an assessment of environmental effects in such detail as corresponds with the scale and significance of the effects that the activity may have on the environment.

[60]     Section 122(1) of the RMA provides that “a resource consent is neither real nor personal property”.

[61]     Pursuant to s 134 of the RMA, land use and subdivision consents attach to the land to which they relate, so may be “enjoyed” by the owner and occupier of the land.   If the holder of the consent does not own the land, then the owner and the holder may each “enjoy” the land use consent.  The holder of the resource consent may transfer the holder’s interest in the consent, pursuant to s 134(3) of the RMA. Other consents, such as permits to take water or to discharge contaminants, may in certain circumstances be transferred by the holder of the permit, in accordance with ss 136 and 137 of the RMA, respectively.

Resource consents in the context of the Income Tax Act

[62]     Section DB 13B of the ITA 2004 provides (as amended as from 1 October

2005) that a person who applies for a resource consent under the RMA, and is refused  the  grant  or  withdraws  the  application,  is  allowed  a  deduction  for expenditure incurred in relation to the application, that would have been part of the cost of depreciable property, or otherwise a deduction, if the application for resource consent had been granted, and for which a deduction is not allowed under another provision.

[63]     Section EE 53(1) (in subpart EE “Depreciation”) of the ITA 2004 provides

that  depreciable  intangible  property  means  the  property  listed  in  Schedule  17. Section EE 53(2) sets out the criteria for property to be listed in Schedule 17.  It is

25     See MacLaurin v Hexton Holdings Ltd [2008] NZCA 570, (2008) 10 NZCPR 1 (CA), at [47].

required to be intangible, and to have a finite useful life that could be determined with a reasonable degree of certainty at the date of its acquisition.  Section EE 53(3) provides that property listed in Schedule 17 is depreciable intangible property even if the criteria in s EE 53(3) are not met.

[64]     Pursuant  to  s  OB 1  (definition  of “property”),  “property”  in  subpart  EE includes consents granted under the RMA.   Thus, for the purposes of subpart EE (Depreciation), s OB 1 of the ITA 2004 overrides s 122 of the RMA, and resource consents can be property.  The explanatory note to the introduction to s OB 1 states that the provision was introduced to “include for depreciation purposes consents under the [RMA]” due to certain consents (those listed in Schedule 17) being able to

be treated as depreciable intangible property.26

[65]     The property listed in Schedule 17 of the ITA 2004 (depreciable intangible property) includes, at clause 9:

9        a consent granted under the [RMA] to do something that otherwise would contravene sections 12 to 15 of [the RMA] (other than a consent for a reclamation), being a consent granted in or after the 1996-97 tax year

Submissions as to the statutory context

[66]     For the Commissioner, Mr McLellan relied on s OB 1 of the ITA 2004 to argue that under the ITA, resource consents are property.  He further submitted that ss DB 13B and EE 53 (together with clause 9 of Schedule 17) support the conclusion that resource consents are prima facie capital assets, and that the purposes of s DB

13B shows that resource consents should be capitalised.   In support of this submission, Mr McLellan referred to the explanatory note on the introduction of the legislation under which s DB 13B was inserted into the ITA 2004.  The explanatory note in respect of s DB 13B stated:27

Patent and resource management application costs

An amendment is proposed that allows costs associated with patent and resource management consent applications to be deducted, although the applications are not granted or are withdrawn.  Costs for such applications

26     See Taxation (Miscellaneous Issues) Bill 1995 (No 109-1) (explanatory note) at xv.

27     Taxation (Annual Rates, Venture Capital and Miscellaneous Provisions) Bill 2004 (No 110-1) (explanatory note) at 5.

cannot currently be claimed under the general deductibility rules as they are a capital expense.   Nor can they be depreciated as there is no depreciable asset.   Under the proposed change, the deductible expenditure consists of those costs that would have been depreciable if a patent or resource management consent had been granted.

[67]     Mr McLellan also referred to the Commentary on the Bill:28

Patents and certain consents issued under the [RMA] are depreciable intangible property.   To the extent expenditure incurred in applying for a patent or resource management consent results in an application being granted, the costs must be capitalised and depreciated.   However, if an application is unsuccessful or is withdrawn, any costs incurred up to that point are not depreciable as there is no depreciable asset.   Nor can this expenditure be expensed under the general deductibility rules because it is capital in nature.

Mr McLellan submitted that s DB 13B made it clear that resource consents, once granted, are capital assets, and hence must be property.

[68]     Mr  Harley  submitted  that  subpart  EE  does  not  apply  in  this  case,  as TrustPower did not use, or have available for use, the resource consents during the relevant tax years.29   On that basis, he submitted, the consents were not depreciable, and the expenditure incurred in obtaining them was deductible under the general permission.  Thus, pursuant to s EE 7(j), the resource consents cannot be depreciable property, s OB 1 cannot apply, and under s 122 of the RMA, the consents would not be property.

[69]     Mr Harley further submitted that s DB 13B of the ITA 2004 is irrelevant to the issues to be considered in this proceeding.  He submitted that s DB 13B cannot inform the decision as to whether the expenditure is deductible.  He submitted that

s DB 13B is not a catch-all provision.

28     Policy Advice Division “Taxation (Annual Rates, Venture Capital and Miscellaneous Provisions)

Bill 2004, Commentary on the Bill” (Inland Revenue, Wellington, 2004) at 9.

29     The relevant tax years were the years ending 31 March 2006, 2007, and 2008.  The resource consents for the projects were granted as follows: Arnold: 17 December 2010; Kaiwera Downs:

30 May 2009; Mahinerangi: 15 December 2008; Wairau: 8 June 2011.  In each case the consents were pursuant to a decision of the Environment Court.

Discussion

[70]   In Aoraki Water Trust v Meridian Energy Ltd (“Aoraki Water Trust”) (concerning an application to take water in respect of which Meridian had a permit to take all the available water), a Full Court of the High Court referred to s 122 of the RMA and said that, pursuant to s 122(1), a resource consent is not itself either real or personal property, but creates a right to use a resource.30

[71]     In   Marlborough   District   Council   v   Valuer-General,   Ronald  Young  J discussed s 122 in the context of an application for a declaration that mussel farms authorised by coastal permits under the RMA were rateable as “land”.31   His Honour accepted that s 122(1) prevents the courts from recognising any property rights, real or personal, in respect of resource consents except where, and only to the extent that, Parliament has provided for them.  In the case before him, his Honour concluded that the grant and operation of a coastal permit did not give rise to any real property.32

[72]     In another context, concerning different legislation, s 122 of the RMA has not been regarded as determinative.  In its judgment in New Zealand Maori Council v Attorney-General (“NZ Maori Council”), the Supreme Court accepted that water permits obtained by Mighty River Power were properly regarded as “interests in the Waikato River”, and were “assets” as defined in the State-Owned Enterprises Act

1986.33   In this respect, the Court differed from the position taken by Ronald Young J

in the High Court, in reliance on s 122 of the RMA.34   The Supreme Court went on to observe, however, that the issue before it was not whether the water permits were property rights, rather whether the public offering of shares in Mighty River Power constituted a disposal of any such rights. The Court held that it did not.35

[73]     In this case, the provisions of the RMA establish the nature of the “legal arrangements entered into”36 (that is, the resource consents applied for and obtained)

30     Aoraki Water Trust v Meridian Energy Ltd [2005] 2 NZLR 268 (HC) at [35].

31     Marlborough District Council v Valuer-General [2008] 1 NZLR 690 (HC).

32     At [41]–[59].

33     New Zealand Maori Council v Attorney-General [2013] NZSC 6, [2013] 3 NZLR 31 (SC) at

[81].

34     New Zealand Maori Council v Attorney-General [2012] NZHC 3338 at [334].

35     New Zealand Maori Council v Attorney-General, above n 33, at [81]–[82].

36     See McKenzies, above n 11, at 742.

but while that is an important part of the analysis, it does not determine the interpretation and application of the tax legislation.  While it is necessary to consider the nature and effect of the resource consents, the RMA provisions do not dominate.

[74]     Turning to the ITA 2004, while the parties agree as to which provisions are relevant, they disagree as to their application.  The first area of disagreement is as to whether s EE 7(j) applies, and so whether subpart EE applies.  I accept Mr Harley’s submission that, as TrustPower did not use the resource consents, or have them available for use, during the relevant tax years, subpart EE cannot apply.  However, even  if  subpart  EE  did  apply,  it  could  only  be  consents  permitting  activities otherwise  restricted  by  ss 12–15  of  the  RMA  that  are  “depreciable  intangible property” pursuant to Schedule 17 of the ITA 2004.  Those consents do not include land use consents, and it is land use consents which are significant in each of the four projects referred to in this case.

[75]     The second area of dispute concerns s DB 13B.  I note, first, that s DB 13B

was amended by the Taxation (Base Maintenance and Miscellaneous Provisions) Act

2005. The Select Committee in 2005 commented that:37

The intent of [the 2004 amendment] was to allow a deduction for costs [of a resource consent application that is unsuccessful or withdrawn] that would have been depreciable either in their own right or as part of the cost of other depreciable property, if the application was granted.  However, as a result of the drafting of this provision, these costs are not deductible if they would have been part of the cost of other depreciable property had the consent been granted.  This was not intended, and we recommend that the bill be amended to correct this effect.

We recommend amending the bill to provide that consent costs that would have been deductible if a resource consent had been granted are also within the scope of these rules. ...

[76]     I conclude that s DB 13B provides no guidance as to how resource consents

should be treated.  I do not accept Mr McLellan’s submission that the need for s DB

13B  supports  the  proposition  that  resource  consents  are  identifiable  assets  that should be capitalised and may be able to be depreciated.  What s DB 13B provides is

that resource consents may be capitalised; it does not provide that they should be.

37     Taxation (Base  Maintenance  and  Miscellaneous Provisions) Bill  (231-2)  (select  committee report) at 10.

Further, the commentary indicates that resource consents may be separate, or part of other depreciable property.  I do not accept the submission for the Commissioner that s DB 13B supports a conclusion that all resource consents are separate assets and that expenditure incurred in applying for them is non-deductible.

[77]     While I do not accept Mr Harley’s submission that the provisions of s DB

13B and Schedule 17 of the ITA 2004 are irrelevant, I conclude that it is appropriate to exercise caution in drawing inferences from the wording of one section of the ITA

2004 as to the interpretation and application of another section.  Referring again to McKenzies, Richardson J’s observation concerning the applicability of provisions relating to the tax treatment of other kinds of lease transactions to the deductibility of payments to surrender leases is instructive:38

… we consider that the provisions of the Income Tax Act referring to the income tax treatment of receipts and payments in relation to other kinds of lease transactions are an insubstantial foundation from which to draw inferences as to the assessability or deductibility of payments in respect of the surrender of leases, one way or the other.

[78]     After  referring  to  provisions  relating  to  leases  (which  did  not  deal  with payments made or received on surrender of a lease), Richardson J said:39

In the circumstances it would be unsafe to draw any inference of a legislative purpose other than that their character as capital or income fall for determination on general taxation principles.

[79]     In interpreting and applying ss DA 1 (the general permission) and DA 2, (the capital limitation) regard must be had to the scheme and purpose of the ITA 2004 as a whole.  The ITA provides a framework, but will not be determinative as to whether TrustPower’s expenditure in obtaining the resource consents was capital or revenue in nature.   That issue to be determined by considering what the expenditure was

“calculated to effect from a practical and business point of view”,40 and weighing the

factors set out in BP Australia,41 and McKenzies.42

38     McKenzies, above n 11, at 739–740.

39     At 740.

40     See Hallstroms, above n 8, at 648.

41     BP Australia, above n 10.

42     McKenzies, above n 11.

Are  the  resource  consents  obtained  by TrustPower,  on  a  stand-alone  basis, assets?

Introduction

[80]     Mr  Harley  submitted  that  the  “logically  prior”  question  to  whether  the resource consents were capital or revenue assets (and whether expenditure incurred in  obtaining  them  was  capital  or  revenue  in  nature)  was  whether  the  resource consents could properly be said to be “assets”.  If they are not assets, he submitted, it follows that there is no need to consider whether they are capital or revenue assets by applying the BP Australia tests.

[81]     The word “asset” is not generally defined in the ITA 2004.43    The question whether the resource consents are assets arises  out of the identifiable asset test formulated for the purpose of deciding whether expenditure is on capital or revenue account:  see  Granada  Motorway  Services,44   and  McKenzies.45     While  the  word “asset” is often seen as referring to a proprietary right in something of value, for tax purposes,  the  term  “asset”  has  broader  application.    In  Sun  Newspapers  Ltd  v Federal   Commissioner   of   Taxation   (“Sun   Newspapers”),   Dixon J   considered whether:46

The result or purpose of the expenditure may be to bring into existence or procure some asset or advantage of a lasting character which will enure for the benefit of the organization or “profit-earning subject”.

(Emphasis added)

Accordingly, in order to determine the “logically prior” question, it is necessary to

consider the nature of the resource consents, and what they provide for TrustPower.

[82]     The resource consents gave TrustPower permission to do something that it otherwise  could  not  legally  do:  to  use  land,  to  use  water,  or  to  discharge contaminants.  Without land use consents, it could not legally construct any of the

four projects.  Without water and discharge permits, it could not legally construct the

43     “Asset” is defined in section CU11 and section DU8, both of which relate to mining.   The

definitions are restricted to those subparts.

44     Granada Motorway Services, above n 6, at 106-107.

45     McKenzies, above n 11, at 746.

46     Sun Newspapers Ltd v Federal Commissioner of Taxation (1938) 61 CLR 337 at 361.

Arnold and Wairau hydro projects.  Grants of the required resource consents were necessary for each project to continue along the development pipeline.

[83]     The period of a land use consent is unlimited, unless otherwise specified in the consent. A water or discharge permit may be granted for up to 35 years although the default duration is five years.47   TrustPower generally sought water and discharge consents for ten year periods.

[84]     Like the ITA 2004, case law is somewhat ambiguous as to whether resource consents are stand-alone, “separate”, assets.  In his decision for the Taxation Review Authority in Case T53, Judge Barber declined an application by a taxpayer to deduct legal fees incurred in a successful appeal against the refusal of resource consents required  to  carry  on  a  second-hand  machinery  business.48    In  declining  the

deduction, Judge Barber said:49

In securing a resource consent it seems to me that the objector has clearly obtained an enduring benefit or advantage.  That resource consent gave the objector the benefit or advantage of having the legitimate right to trade, or operate a business, on the particular farmland.  This is an intangible benefit both for the objector company and the land which belongs to GR and his wife.

Judge Barber said further:50

Mr Brown submits that, on the facts of this case, no identifiable asset is produced by the expenditure.   However, it seems to me that the resource consent is an intangible asset of the business of the objector.  In so far as the objector submitted that the expenditure related to the protection of a right, I observe that the expenditure actually relates to the obtaining of a right which did not previously exist before the granting of the resource consent.

[85]     In Milburn New Zealand Ltd v CIR (“Milburn”), Wild J held that expenditure incurred in obtaining resource consents and licences for Milburn’s quarries for sourcing aggregate and lime for its cement and concrete business was of a capital,

not revenue nature.51    In the course of considering the “character of the advantage

47     Resource Management Act 1991, s 123.

48     Case T53 (1998) 18 NZTC 8,404 (TRA).

49 At [21].

50 At [27].

51     Milburn New Zealand Ltd v CIR (2001) 20 NZTC 17,017 (HC).

sought” (one of the BP Australia indicia), his Honour said of a submission for the

Commissioner that the consents and licences “had a lasting quality”:52

I prefer to view the consents and licences as inseparable from the quarries to which they are related.  But even if they are viewed separately, as assets in their own right, they are enduring and not recurrent in nature.

[86]     In ECC Quarries Ltd v Watkis (Inspector of Quarries) (“ECC Quarries”) Brightman J considered whether expenses incurred in obtaining relevant consents for a quarry were capital or revenue.53   In his judgment his Honour expressed doubt as

to whether the consents were assets (in their own right),54 but found that the consents

allowed the subsequent operations of working and winning the minerals.   The consents themselves would not produce profits, but the operations permitted by the consents would.55

Submissions

[87]     Mr Harley submitted that TrustPower’s “Type 2” resource consents cannot be isolated and seen, on a stand-alone basis, as assets.   He submitted that when seen from TrustPower’s business and practical point of view, the resource consents are only part of the components of a particular project option, each option is part of the development pipeline as a whole, and the pipeline is only one of the possible sources of electricity to be sold by TrustPower.   He submitted that the resource consents “simply tell TrustPower how much fuel it has available to it” and the consents do this by determining how much water can be used in a hydro station, or how many wind turbines can be erected on a wind farm.  Mr Harley accepted that a grant of resource consent was necessary to advance a project along the development pipeline, but pointed out that the grant was not in and of itself sufficient for a decision to be made to take any project through to the next stage.

[88]     Mr  Harley  further  submitted  that  at  the  time  the  resource  consents  are granted, the underlying project is inchoate, and has no business utility.  The various

conditions imposed in the consent need to be satisfied, and TrustPower needs to

52     At 17,025.

53     ECC Quarries Ltd v Watkis (Inspector of Quarries) [1977] 1 WLR 1386 (ChD).

54     At 1396.

55     At 1397.

make a decision to progress the project to construction, before the project can be considered as a reality.  Without this “reality”, he submitted, neither the underlying project nor the resource consents were close to being “assets”.

[89]     Mr Harley also submitted that the Commissioner’s focus on the resource consents (and in particular, the AEEs submitted with the application for consents) focused on the wrong question.  He submitted that the proper focus is the role and place of resource consents in TrustPower’s feasibility and optionality analysis process.   He also submitted that the fact that resource consents may share some characteristics of real and personal property (such as transferability) did not mean that the consents were to be recognised by the Court as assets.

[90]     Mr McLellan submitted that the resource consents are assets, for the reasons that they are fundamental aspects of the development pipeline (in which very few projects are taken to the stage of obtaining resource consents), and the consents provide  value  and  benefits  to TrustPower  both  by themselves  and  as  part  of  a package of rights.   He submitted that the resource consents provided TrustPower with the ability to decide whether to construct the project or defer it until later, the existence of the consents was a block to any competitor carrying out competing activity in the same area, and the consents could also be sold by TrustPower.  In all of these respects, the consents were of value to TrustPower.  Mr McLellan further submitted that the resource consents had value to third parties.   Accordingly, he submitted, the consents are properly regarded as assets for tax purposes, under the ITA 2004.

[91]     Mr McLellan also referred to the evidence of Professor Evans, called by the Commissioner to give expert evidence as to the nature (and in particular the value) of TrustPower’s resource consents, from the perspective of an economist.   Mr McLellan summarised  Professor Evans’ evidence as being that the value of the resource consents lay in their (a) providing rights to essential resources and the ability to choose the timing of investment and project expenditure, (b) being property (intangible assets) independent of (but complementary to) the land to which they relate, (c) providing enduring flows of services, and (d) being tradable with some restrictions.

Discussion

[92]     I accept Mr Harley’s submission that in none of T53, Milburn, and ECC Quarries, was a question raised as to whether the taxpayer was committed to undertaking  the  operation  for  which  the  consents  were  required.    That  is,  the taxpayer in T53 was carrying on the business of selling second-hand machinery, and Milburn and ECC Quarries were concerned with consents for existing quarries. These cases are, therefore, ones involving what Mr Harley described as “functional capital assets”.  In each case, the consents obtained were a crucial part of carrying on the business, and are akin to those which TrustPower describes as “Type 1” consents, for existing operations.

[93]     However, the finding in each of these cases that the consents are inseparable from the business or land to which they relate lends support to the conclusion that the resource consents in this case cannot be seen as separate assets, on a stand-alone basis.  That is, the consents cannot be seen as assets which are separable from the projects to which they relate.

[94]     I have referred to the evidence for TrustPower in some detail, at [16] to [28], above, and in the chronologies set out in the Appendix.   I accept that TrustPower obtained the resource consents in the course of taking the respective projects further along the development pipeline, and that the consents can be said to be part of the components of each of the project options.   While each of the witnesses for TrustPower accepted that the consents were of value to TrustPower, each said that that value was only as part of a “bundle”, “package”, or “suite” of rights.   I also accept TrustPower’s evidence that the development pipeline itself is only one part of TrustPower’s business development:  constructing a hydro station or wind turbine to generate electricity is only one method by which TrustPower sources electricity to sell.  Buying electricity for re-sale is always considered against generating it.

[95]     Further, the value of resource consents may be tenuous, at best:  for example, having resource consents  is  not all that  is required  for the decision  whether to proceed to construction, or to defer the project.  I accept TrustPower’s evidence that there  are  many  other  factors  that  must  be  considered.    Secondly,  the  fact  that

TrustPower has resource consents will not “block” competitors from competing in the area.  As Mr Campbell said in his evidence for TrustPower, the same wind will blow across the hill next to where TrustPower has resource consents.  I also accept Mr Harley’s submission that in the absence of a commitment by TrustPower to proceed  to  construction,  there  is  very  little  competitive  advantage  in  holding resource consents.  Further, I accept that resource consents, on a stand-alone basis, will be of little interest for possible sale. Any value of the consents could only be as part of a package.  Such value as the resource consents may have does not, in my view, lead to the consents being stand-alone, assets, independent of the projects to which they relate.

[96]     That conclusion is reinforced by the evidence relating to the approach in relation to Kaiwera Downs (referred to at 2.12 of the Appendix).  The offer was to purchase the site, including the resource consents, technical reports and designs, landowner agreements, and any physical assets related to the project.  That is, the offer was in relation to the project as a whole, not the resource consents on a stand- alone basis.

[97]     On the particular facts of this case, I therefore find that the resource consents obtained by TrustPower for the Arnold, Kaiwera Downs, Mahinerangi, and Wairau projects are not stand-alone assets, separate from the projects to which they relate. The resource consents are part and parcel of the projects.  It would be artificial from a practical and business point of view to regard them as separate assets in their own right.   The expenditure in obtaining them must, therefore, be treated in the same manner as the projects.  As noted at [11], above, the adjudication unit decided that expenditure  relating  to  the  projects  was  not  capital  in  nature.    Rather,  it  was feasibility expenditure.   The same conclusion must apply in relation to the expenditure incurred in obtaining resource consents, as they are not stand-alone assets, separate from the projects to which they relate.  It follows that TrustPower’s expenditure was feasibility (revenue) expenditure, and is deductible pursuant to the general permission.

The BP Australia indicia

[98]     The above conclusion is sufficient for me to find in favour of TrustPower. However, for the sake of completeness, and in case it is held that I am wrong in that conclusion, and the resource consents are stand-alone assets, I go on to consider, briefly, the BP Australia indicia in order to determine whether they are capital or revenue assets.

What was the need or occasion which called for the expenditure?

[99]     Identifying the need or occasion for expenditure involves considering the factual background in which the expenditure was incurred, and the reason for the payment.   In Birkdale Service Station Ltd v Commissioner of Inland Revenue, the Court of Appeal observed that, in that case, the background (in other words, the “need  or occasion  for  the expenditure”) to  the  transactions  at  issue  (lump  sum payments made in connection with the taxpayer’s entry into certain agreements) was

of considerable importance.56  If there is more than one reason, the principal reason

for the payment determines the character of the payment.57

[100]   Mr Harley submitted that it is evident that  there were multiple purposes behind the expenditure incurred before TrustPower applied for resource consents. He accepted that one of the purposes of the expenditure was to make an application for resource consent (if the decision was ultimately made to do so), but submitted that that was not the principal purpose.  None of the purposes was more significant or more important to TrustPower than others.  He submitted that to place emphasis on one purpose over others was misguided; the focus of the case must be on the nature or character of the expenditure. The true character of the expenditure incurred in obtaining resource consents was that it advanced projects along the feasibility pipeline, and supported pipeline optionality.  Thus, the expenditure was of the same

character as TrustPower’s other operating costs.

56     Birkdale Service Station Ltd v Commissioner of Inland Revenue [2001] 1 NZLR 293 (CA) at

[33].

57     See Christchurch Press Co Ltd v Commissioner of Inland Revenue (1993) 15 NZTC 10,206 (HC) at 10,209.

[101]   Mr McLellan  submitted that  the principal  purpose for which TrustPower incurred the expenditure was to secure resource consents for each of the projects.  He submitted that the principal purpose of  instructing consultants to prepare AEEs, carrying out consultation, and lodging applications for consents was to apply for and obtain consents.  He submitted that it was unrealistic for TrustPower to maintain that securing resource consents was not the principal purpose of the expenditure.

[102]   This question requires the determination of a factual issue.  I have accepted TrustPower’s evidence that the resource consents were applied for and obtained in the course of taking the respective projects further along the development pipeline.  I would accept that the purpose, or occasion, for the expenditure was not solely or principally to obtain resource consents.   Rather, I would find that the expenditure was incurred as part of TrustPower’s investigation into the feasibility of the projects, to define the parameters of possible projects, and to enable an assessment of possible projects against TrustPower’s other options for sourcing electricity to sell to customers.

[103]   Accordingly, on this aspect of the BP Australia indicia, I would find that the occasion or need for the expenditure points to it being on revenue rather than capital account.

Were the payments made from fixed or circulating capital?

[104]   The  distinction  between  fixed  and  circulating  capital  (as  a  guide  to determining whether expenditure is of a capital or revenue nature) was noted in the judgment of the House of Lords in John Smith & Son v Moore, where Viscount Haldane, drawing on the distinction made by Adam Smith in The Wealth of Nations, discussed two ways in which profit may be produced: from the sale of purchases on income account (circulating capital), and from realisation of assets forming part of

the  business  concern  (fixed  capital).58      For  tax  purposes,  the  former  indicates

revenue, the latter capital.

58     John Smith & Son v Moore [1921] 2 AC 16 (HL) at 19.

[105]   In Milburn, Wild J was unable to view the test of whether expenditure was from  fixed  or  circulating  capital  as  compelling,  or  even  useful,  and  wondered whether it “might not be given a quiet burial”.59   In Commissioner of Inland Revenue v Fullers Bay of Islands (“Fullers”) (in which the issue was whether legal fees incurred in attempting to secure a contract were on capital or revenue account), Baragwanath J said that the abandonment of the concept of nominal capital in the Companies Act 1993 pointed to the “unreality” of treating the source of funds as a significant guide to whether expenditure is to be treated as capital or revenue for tax purposes.60    Fullers  was  appealed  to  the  Court  of  Appeal,  which  upheld  the

1.5      Draft  assessments  and  feasibility  studies  were  received  from  consultants during October 2005.  A report to the Board for its October 2005 meeting recorded that public open days had been held, the resource consent application remained on schedule for December 2005, negotiations with landowners were ongoing, preliminary design was complete, and a financial analysis was to be presented to the Board at its November 2005 meeting.

1.6      An “Arnold Hydro Scheme Development Update Report November 2005” was presented to the TrustPower Board meeting on 24 November 2005.  The report was accompanied by an “Arnold Options Valuation Analysis” appendix.  The report concluded with a recommendation that the Board approve expenditure for necessary land purchases and option agreements for the “Base Arnold Scheme” (equivalent to “phase one” referred to in the September Project Status Report), to lodge a resource consent application around the end of 2005, to begin long term monitoring programmes in relation to an extension of the base scheme (equivalent to “phase two” in the September Project Status Report, and known as the “Taramakau Diversion”), and to purchase or secure options over land potentially required for the Taramakau Diversion.   The Board approved the recommendations for land acquisitions and completion of the RMA consent application.

1.7      Briefs  of  work  were  sent  to  consultants  in  respect  of  the  Taramakau

Diversion in late November 2005.   Management reported to the December 2005

Board meeting that work was under way with “optimisation of the scheme with the Taramakau scheme included”, work with landowners continued, and ecological studies for the Taramakau Diversion were “scoped and out for pricing”.

1.8      Management reported to the Board’s 27 February and 3 April 2006 meetings that the Arnold scheme was in the “consenting/engineering design” phase, that land negotiations were progressing, and the preparation of the AEE was “slightly behind schedule due to the Taramakau addition”.   The application for a resource consent was lodged on 29 March 2006.  The application was in respect of the project without the Taramakau Diversion.  Lodgement of the application was reported to the Board’s

27 April 2006 meeting, when it was also noted that negotiations were continuing with landowners and recreational users.

1.9      Feasibility studies and assessments in respect of the Taramakau Diversion were received in the period from May to September 2006.  During the same period, and up to late 2010, TrustPower purchased a number of parcels of land and obtained, where necessary, consent from the Overseas Investment Office.

1.10     The hearing of the application for resource consent began on 5 November

2007.  The consent process was eventually completed on 17 December 2010, with a final decision of the Environment Court.

1.11     In July 2011, an “Arnold Hydro Business Case” was submitted to the Board. In the section headed “Summary and Recommendations”, it was noted that TrustPower could shelve the project for review in the future, complete “phase one” of an “Early Contractor Involvement (ECI) process” (and at obtaining a “Reference

Target Out-turn Cost”) then re-assess the project, or complete the full ECI process and proceed to a construction investment decision.  Management recommended the second alternative and this was approved by the Board.

1.12     Management presented an “Arnold Hydro ECI Phase 1 (Reference TOC) Preliminary Update” to the Board’s November 2011 meeting.  A further update was presented to the Board’s April 2012 meeting, in which management recommended that the ECI work would be suspended, to be reviewed on a six-monthly basis.

2.       Kaiwera Downs wind farm

2.1      The   Kaiwera   Downs   wind   farm   project   is   a   proposed   wind   farm approximately  15 kilometres  south-east  of  Gore,  in  Southland.    It  was  initially referred to as the “Wilson/Jackson Wind Farm”.

2.2      A report for the August 2005 meeting of the TrustPower Board recorded that two landowners had been signed up, and appeared to have good prospects for wind development.   At the September and October 2005 Board meetings the Kaiwera Downs  project  was  recorded  as  being  at  the  “feasibility-land  access/modelling” stage.   Management reported to the November 2005 Board meeting that it was analysing the two wind farms, and that wind modelling was in place.

2.3      At  the  December  2005  Board  meeting,  management  reported  that  wind resource  analysis  had  been  completed,  and  that  the  opportunity  was  being progressed.   It was noted that a resource consent application could follow shortly after another application which was expected to be lodged in February 2006.

2.4      At the February 2006 Board meeting, management reported that additional monitoring masts were to be installed, additional landowners had been identified and would be signed up, and indications were that a wind farm was viable.  Monitoring continued throughout 2006, and further landowners were signed up.  As from the report for the September 2006 Board meeting, the Kaiwera Downs project was listed in the “consenting/engineering design” phase of the generation development pipeline table included in the agenda papers.

2.5      During December 2006 and January 2007, TrustPower engaged consultants for the Kaiwera Downs project.  Management reported to the February 2007 Board meeting that landowner agreements were in place with seven sets of landowners, discussions were being held with two remaining owners, transmission land access agreements were in place, and wind monitoring reports were encouraging.  At the March 2007 Board meeting, management advised that consultants had been engaged for civil design work for the consenting phase of the project, and a public meeting would be held in Southland ahead of submitting a resource consent application.  A public open day was held in Gore on 29 March 2007.

2.6      Scoping reports were received from consultants during April 2007.   The development pipeline table included in the agenda papers for the April 2007 Board meeting recorded that work had started towards an application for resource consents.

2.7      In a media statement issued on 10 May 2007, commenting on TrustPower’s audited financial results for the year ended 31 March 2007, it was recorded that TrustPower was investigating the potential for a wind farm of up to 185 MW at Kaiwera Downs, land access arrangements were nearing completion, and wind monitoring was being undertaken.   It was also recorded that a resource consent application was expected to be lodged in the last quarter of 2007.

2.8      An internal preliminary assessment of the feasibility of the Kaiwera Downs projected dated 28 May 2007 noted a potential fatal flaw, relating to the landscape and visual effects of the proposed wind farm, and that further analysis was required to clarify whether those effects were likely to constitute a fatal flaw.

2.9      On 27 June 2007, TrustPower issued further briefs of work to consultants, for preparation of reports to be included in the AEE required for the resource consent application.  The pipeline development table included in the agenda papers for the August 2007 Board meeting recorded that the AEE was nearing completion, and the site location was being refined on an ecological, geotechnical, and wind resource basis.

2.10     Peer reviewers were engaged in respect of the consultants’ AEE assessments

in late October 2007.  The resource consent application was made on 5 November

2007.   Peer reviews of the AEE assessments were received by TrustPower during

November and December 2007.

2.11     The hearing for the resource consent application began on 31 March 2008. Consents were granted in a decision given in June 2008.   An appeal to the Environment Court was resolved by a consent order made on 13 May 2009.

2.12     In  early  2010,  TrustPower  received  an  approach  concerning  a  possible purchase from TrustPower of two wind farm projects: Kaiwera Downs and Mahinerangi.   Following execution of a confidentiality deed, TrustPower provided an Information Memorandum concerning both projects.  In April 2010, TrustPower received  an  offer  to  purchase  the  Kaiwera  Downs  site,  including  the  resource consent,  technical  reports  and  designs,  landowner agreements,  and  any physical assets related to the project.  The offer was subject to due diligence and approval by the offeror’s Board. Although discussions continued for some time, an offer was not accepted.

2.13     The  Kaiwera  Downs  project  has  not  been  developed  further,  although feasibility modelling work has continued, and land option agreements have been extended.

3.       Mahinerangi wind farm

3.1      The Mahinerangi project is a proposed wind farm west of Dunedin.   It is close to two TrustPower hydro schemes, Deep Stream and Waipori.   Mahinerangi was  earlier  referred  to  as  “Eldorado”  or  “Waipori  Wind”.    Mahinerangi  was

identified in the generation pipeline table for the September 2005 TrustPower Board

meeting, as being in the “land access / monitoring” phase.

3.2      TrustPower engaged consultants to provide landscape/visual and ecological (terrestrial, aquatic and avian) assessments for the feasibility study phase, in late October 2005.  Management reported to the TrustPower Board meeting in October

2005 that original impressions of a good wind site had been confirmed, that an application for resource consent to install a “Met Mast” had been submitted, and that it was aiming to apply for a resource consent for the Mahinerangi wind farm early in

2006.

3.3      In   late   November   2005,   TrustPower   engaged   consultants   to   provide assessment reports to be included in the AEE for an application for resource consent for Mahinerangi.  Management reported to the November 2005 Board meeting that landowner   agreements   were   proceeding   well,   and   that   environmental   and engineering studies were under way, targeting February/March 2006 for lodging an application for resource consent. The Board was advised at its January 2006 meeting that management was still on target to lodge a resource consent application in late February or early March.

3.4     Management reported to TrustPower’s January 2006 Board meeting that potential turbine sites had been identified, and option agreements had been signed with two landowners.  Negotiations were continuing with four further landowners, one of which was the Dunedin City Council.   Main concerns with the projected related to the visual impact, traffic effects during construction, and the impact on a local lizard population. A resource consent application was expected to be lodged in early April 2006.

3.5      The report for the 3 April 2006 TrustPower Board meeting recorded that negotiations with the four landowners were continuing, and that a resource consent application was expected to be lodged in May 2006.  At the Board meeting on 27
April  2006,  management  reported  on  requests  for  expressions  of  interest  from turbine manufacturers, and public and individual consultations that had been held.

3.6      In its media statement issued on 12 May 2007, on the release of its audited financial results for the year ended 31 March 2006, TrustPower recorded that it expected to lodge a resource consent application for the Mahinerangi project “within the next month”, and that it was likely that the project would be completed in stages.

3.7      Management  reported  at  the  June  2006  TrustPower  Board  meeting  that lodging of the resource consent application had been delayed at the request of the Dunedin City Council.  The application for resource consent was lodged in late June

2006.

3.8      A “Valuation Update Report [Mahinerangi] Wind Investment Opportunity” was presented to the TrustPower Board’s June 2006 meeting.  The report set out the result of computer modelling of the project costs against various changing circumstances  (including  exchange  rate  movements,  local  construction  costs,

availability of imported equipment, HVDC charges, and the uncertainty of resource consenting and land access) and projected revenue.  The report recommended that TrustPower complete remaining landowner agreements, secure a resource consent for a 300MW wind farm, and monitor the site to obtain a comprehensive high quality data set.

3.9      At the August 2006 Board meeting, management reported that it was giving consideration to reducing the “consenting window” for the Mahinerangi project to exclude the Dunedin City Council land.  The Chief Executive noted that he would be meeting with the Council to advise that TrustPower would be proceeding with a smaller project on privately owned land.

3.10     In early September 2006, TrustPower asked its consultants to revise their earlier assessment reports to allow for a change to the development envelope, to allow for a maximum generation capacity of 200MW.   A second application for resource consent for Mahinerangi was lodged in early December 2006.   The first application was formally cancelled in January 2007.

3.11     The hearing of the second resource consent application began on 10 May

2007.   A decision to grant the consents was given on 27 September 2007.   The decision was appealed to the Environment Court, which issued an interim decision in July 2008 and a final decision granting consent on 15 December 2008.

3.12     As noted in respect of the Kaiwera Downs project, TrustPower received an approach as to a possible purchase of the Mahinerangi project in early 2010.   No offer was made in respect of Mahinerangi.

3.13     In a media statement issued on 5 February 2010 on the release of its third quarter operating results at 31 December 2009, TrustPower recorded that it   was seeking pricing from wind turbine suppliers for Stage 1 of the Mahinerangi project, and  that  that  process  would  assist  in  determining  whether  it  was  economically feasible to progress the project.

3.14     A business case for Mahinerangi Stage 1 was presented to the TrustPower Board meeting in April 2010.  The Board accepted management’s recommendation to approve construction of Stage 1, from which electricity was to be supplied to the local distribution network.  Stage 1 was completed in May 2011.

4.       Wairau River Hydro

4.1      TrustPower purchased the Branch River Scheme in Marlborough in 1998. The Branch  River is  a  tributary of the Wairau  River.    Following the purchase, TrustPower began investigating the potential for an additional hydro scheme on the Wairau River.

4.2      Management reported to the TrustPower Board meeting on 31 January 2002 that work had started on a survey for a proposed diversion of water from the river,

and that scoping work for environmental and ecological assessments was under way. In October 2002, management reported as to two potential Wairau River schemes, one upstream and one downstream of the existing Branch scheme.

4.3      In February and May 2003, management reported as to negotiations with landowners for access for investigation and feasibility assessment.   In May 2003 management also reported that proposals had been sought from consultants for environmental assessments of the project.  Studies were to commence during May, with a view to completing an AEE for a resource consent application by March 2004. It was further reported that the key objective of the study was to quantify the river flow available for electricity generation, and confirm the economic viability of the project.

4.4      During the remainder of 2003, TrustPower engaged consultants to prepare feasibility assessments, including assessments of the possible effects of the project on the landscape and cultural and archaeological aspects of the Wairau Valley, and to investigate the impact of increased traffic, noise, and dust in construction.

4.5      Tenders  were  called  for  geotechnical  and  engineering  assessments  in

September 2003, with a target of lodging a resource consent application by March

2004.   The terms of reference for the engineering assessments noted that the key objective of the assessments was to present a preliminary design for the scheme that was technically and economically viable and environmentally sustainable.

4.6      In a report for the December 2003 TrustPower Board meeting, management recorded that draft feasibility reports were being reviewed, final draft environmental and engineering assessment reports would be released for peer review at the end of January 2004, and work had started on compiling a summary feasibility report and AEE report.   Management continued to report on progress as to technical and economic appraisal of the project, and consultation with affected landowners, with a view to the negotiation of easements.

4.7      In a “Project Status Update” presented to the Board on 29 April 2004, it was recorded that lodgement of an application for resource consents was subject to receiving the approval of the Board, and securing access/easements to all land in question.

4.8      A “Wairau Valley Hydro Scheme Feasibility Report” was presented to the TrustPower Board at its September 2004 meeting, in respect of a scheme to divert part of the Wairau River flow into the Branch River scheme, then to convey the water  through  interconnecting  canals  and  penstocks  to  five  new  power  stations spaced over about 46 km in the Wairau Valley.  The project was considered to be a robust, environmentally, technically, and economically viable proposition.   Major risks  that  could  halt  development  were  considered  to  be the denial  of  resource consent, and denial of access by one or more landowners along the scheme.

4.9      A “Wairau  Valley  Hydro  Scheme  Development  Evaluation  Report”  was

presented to the June 2005 TrustPower Board meeting.   The report noted that the

scheme layout and project design had been refined since the 2004 feasibility assessment, to mitigate the impact on affected properties and the environment.   It was also noted that as at the date of the report, TrustPower had agreed access to 74 per cent of the required land.  Project risks were listed as being denial of resource consent, a change in government policy, an increasing imbalance between construction industry supply and demand, and increasing costs.  Management sought and obtained Board approval to lodge an application for resource consent.

4.10     The  application  for  resource  consent  was  lodged  on  14  July  2005. TrustPower continued to seek to secure land access by land acquisition and easement agreements, and to engage consultants to peer review assessments and respond to requests  for  further  information  under  s 92  of  the  RMA.    The  application  for resource consent was heard over the period from June to December 2006.   An interim decision was issued in June 2007, and a final decision on 14 July 2008. Appeals to the Environment Court were heard over the period from November 2009 to May 2010, and the Court’s final decision granting consent was delivered on 8 June

2011.

4.11     While application for resource consent was progressing through the local authority  and  Environment  Court,  TrustPower  continued  to  seek  to  secure  land access by acquisition or easement agreements.  As at the date of the Environment Court’s final decision, TrustPower had not been able to secure access agreements with  the  owners  of  36.7  per  cent  of  the  land  required  for  the  project.    Five landowners were considered to be unlikely to agree to access.

4.12     In his  evidence in this Court Mr Campbell (who has been TrustPower’s general  manager,  Generation  since April  2011)  said  that  Wairau  hydro  has  not progressed to second step feasibility.  It has unresolved land access issues and until these issues are resolved, the project is not practicable.  He added that under current market conditions the project is also not likely to be economically viable.

Actions
Download as PDF Download as Word Document


Cases Cited

5

Statutory Material Cited

1