Mercury NZ Limited/Announcement
Mercury NZ Limited logo

Mercury 2021 Annual Shareholders’ Meeting

AGM22 September 2021MCYUtilities

`
The Mercury Building, 33 Broadway, Newmarket 1023


PHONE:

+ 64 9 308 8200

mercury.co.nz

PO Box 90399, Auckland 1142

New Zealand


FAX:

+ 64 9 308 8209




Mercury 2021 Annual Shareholders’ Meeting

23 September 2021 –

The attached presentations will be given at Mercury NZ Limited’s Annual Shareholders’

Meeting starting at 10:00am today which will be held as a virtual meeting. The virtual meeting can be accessed

through the Computershare Meeting Platform

https:meetnow.global/nz

.


To access the meeting:

- click ‘Go’ under the Mercury meeting;

- click ‘Join Meeting Now”.

Shareholders can log in by entering their CSN/Securityholder Number and post code (or country of residence if

outside of New Zealand).


Attachments:

- 2021 Annual Shareholders’ Meeting – Chair and Chief Executive Address

- 2021 Annual Shareholders’ Meeting – Presentation


ENDS


Howard Thomas

General Counsel and Company Secretary

Mercury NZ Limited


For investor relations queries, please contact:

Tim Thompson

Head of Treasury and Investor Relations

0275 173 470

For media queries, please contact:

Shannon Goldstone

Head of Communications

Media phone: 027 210 5337



ABOUT MERCURY NZ LIMITED

Mercury’s mission is energy freedom. Our purpose is to inspire New Zealanders to enjoy energy in more wonderful

ways and our goal is to be New Zealand’s leading energy brand. We focus on our customers, our people, our

partners and our country; maintain a long-term view of sustainability; and promote wonderful choices. Mercury is

energy made wonderful. Visit us at: www.mercury.co.nz


STOCK EXCHANGE LISTINGS: NZX (MCY) / ASX (MCY)


NEWS RELEASE

---

2021 ASM – Chair and Chief Executive Address | 23 September 2021 | Page 1 of 8






Mercury - 2021 Annual Shareholders’ Meeting

Chair and Chief Executive Address



Where: VIRTUAL MEETING

When: 10am (NZT), 23 September 2021


[ADDRESS BY THE CHAIR: PRUE FLACKS]

CHAIR’S ADDRESS

SLIDE 4: CHAIR’S ADDRESS

Kia ora koutou katoa. Haere mai ki tenei hui motuhake.


Good morning ladies and gentlemen and thank you for joining us at this Annual Shareholders’ Meeting.

My name is Prue Flacks and I am Chair of Mercury NZ Limited. On behalf of your directors, the Chief

Executive, our leadership team and all of Mercury, I extend a very warm welcome to those of you who

have been able to join us online.


This is the second year that COVID has forced us to an online forum, and while we always appreciate

the opportunity to interact with you face-to-face, your safety, and the safety of our people, and the wider

community must take priority.


I am pleased to confirm that we have a quorum represented here today and therefore declare ‘open’ the

2021 Annual Shareholders’ Meeting of Mercury NZ Limited. All voting at today’s meeting will be by way

of online poll and, accordingly, in my capacity as Chair I require that a poll be held for each of the

resolutions. Voting is open on all items of business. You have received instructions on asking questions

during this virtual meeting, and also on how to cast votes.

SLIDE 5: AGENDA

Outlining our agenda for today... first, I will introduce you to our board and briefly cover some financial

highlights. I will talk a little about the external environment, and some of the challenges and opportunities

for our sector. I will then hand you over to our Chief Executive, Vince Hawksworth to talk about our

business and how we are responding.


In terms of formal business, we have four resolutions to put to the meeting – these are resolutions for the

election of one Board member, Dennis Barnes; and for the re-election of two other directors who retire

by rotation and are eligible and available for re-election. The fourth resolution is for an increase in the

total annual remuneration payable to all directors.


2021 ASM – Chair & Chief Executive Address | 23 September 2021 | Page 2 of 8


I will outline the process for discussion and voting on the resolutions at that point in the agenda. After the

resolutions are presented and voting is closed, we will take questions from you on our financial and

operational performance or other questions relating to the company. Now for the introductions:

SLIDE 6: YOUR BOARD

All of your Board are present online for this meeting. As I mention them, you should see them on the

screen. We have:


• Hannah Hamling

• Andy Lark

• James Miller

• Keith Smith, who chairs our Risk Assurance and Audit Committee

• Scott St John, who chairs our People and Performance Committee

• Patrick Strange

• Mike Taitoko, who is today seeking re-election, and finally

• Dennis Barnes who joined us this September following an extensive review and recruitment

process.


Dennis’ appointment will fill the vacancy left by Keith Smith, who will step down at the end of this meeting

after 12 years as a director, including over 10 years as Chair of our Risk Assurance and Audit

Committee. I would like to thank Keith for his significant contribution to Mercury during his tenure – the

broad experience and skills he has brought have been invaluable. Following Keith’s retirement, James

Miller will chair the Risk Assurance and Audit Committee.


I am also very pleased to introduce Kim Gordon, our fourth “future director” under the Future Directors

programme established by the Institute of Directors to expand the pool for governance roles in New

Zealand businesses. Kim contributes to discussions and debates but is not involved in Board decision-

making. Kim is based in Auckland and is a technology consulting partner with law firm MinterEllison. We

welcome Kim to Mercury and know that she has much to contribute to our board.


I encourage you to familiarise yourselves with your directors’ professional experience and skills, which

are outlined in the corporate governance section of our Annual Report and on Mercury’s website.

In addition, we are joined online by our:


• Chief Executive, Vince Hawksworth.

• Chief Financial Officer, William Meek, and

• Company Secretary, Howard Thomas, from whom you have already heard.


Also present are representatives of our auditors, Ernst & Young, representatives of our legal advisors,

Chapman Tripp and all members of Mercury’s Executive Team – including our two newest members,

Craig Neustroski, GM Customer; and Stew Hamilton, GM Generation. Welcome both.


Moving, now to some highlights of our financial performance over the past financial year.


2021 ASM – Chair & Chief Executive Address | 23 September 2021 | Page 3 of 8

SLIDE 7: FINANCIAL OVERVIEW

The Board was very pleased to announce a final ordinary dividend of 10.2 cents per share, fully imputed.

This lifted our total FY21 ordinary dividend to 17 cents per share, and was the 13th year of sustainable,

reliable increases to your ordinary dividend.


Our earnings or EBITDAF for FY21 was $463m, which was $27 million lower than the previous year, and

Vince will talk to some of the reasons behind that later. For the eighth consecutive year, our operational

costs remained broadly flat, a credit to the efficiency and productivity of our Mercury team.


Looking forward, our FY22 earnings guidance has been set at $590 million, and dividend guidance is 20

cents per share, up 17.6% on last year. Our guidance reflects the significant investments made to set

Mercury up for the future, which Vince will speak to shortly.

SLIDE 8: CLIMATE CHANGE

Every day that passes brings another tangible demonstration of the devastating impacts of climate

change.


The UN Climate Report released earlier this year indicated that some warming is already locked in and

found that severe weather events that have occurred worldwide in the past few years are linked to

climate change.


The report outlined that immediate, rapid and large-scale reductions in emissions are necessary. New

Zealand has committed to net zero carbon emissions by 2050, and renewable energy sits squarely in the

centre of that goal. This Government has said climate change is “one of the greatest challenges of our

time”. That is true. But we seem to be making it more of a challenge than it should be.


As we work through proposed RMA reforms, we see a very real risk that any renewable energy project of

size will struggle to ever get off the ground, if unworkable environmental limits are imposed.


We need to protect the environment. And we need strong national policy direction that acknowledges

this is exactly what decarbonisation does. Time is rapidly running out. Climate change, and

decarbonisation, must be treated as a priority in the new legislation, given the inextricable link to our

wider world.


Future decisions should account for the climate change benefits of renewable energy projects and

enable offsets or compensation for other environmental effects as we chase the big decarbonisation

goal. The RMA reforms could be an opportunity to practically address New Zealand’s response to

climate change. It should not be a barrier.

SLIDE 9: THE ELECTRICITY MARKET

Low-emissions electricity underpins virtually every other sector’s emission reduction plans and is

therefore critical to achieving our net zero carbon objectives. However the transition to net zero carbon

must be fair. Electricity must be affordable and the lights must stay on. Fortunately, we are starting from

a relatively strong position in New Zealand.


2021 ASM – Chair & Chief Executive Address | 23 September 2021 | Page 4 of 8


I acknowledge the recent challenges experienced by some industrial customers and electricity retailers

as a second dry year in succession, and constrained gas supply, has led to some high wholesale prices

in both the spot and contracts markets. While most retailers have adopted hedging strategies that

cushioned the impact, we also understand the difficulties some are facing. Mercury has and will continue

to actively work with our commercial and industrial customers seeking electricity contracts.


However, it’s important to recognise that the market structure we operate within has delivered strong

results, consistently, over many years.


New Zealanders benefit from:

• One of the most reliable supplies of electricity - the second most secure in the OECD.

• Some of the greenest electricity in the OECD at around 80% renewable. It’s worth comparing that

with Australia, for example, which sits at around 25% renewable.

• And our electricity is among the most affordable – New Zealand ranks in the lowest third of the

OECD.


These results have all been delivered while competition has remained high. There are more than 40

retail brands for customers to choose from, and almost one in five customers change their electricity

supplier every year. It’s very competitive – much more so than other sectors.


Given these results – which are enviable compared to most other countries – it is perhaps unfortunate

that a handful of voices are calling loudly for radical upheaval of the market. One of the biggest risks

facing the sector is the risk of a political response to these calls resulting in regulatory intervention with

unintended consequences.


We need to be very clear. In the context of the investment the Climate Change Commission believes is

needed to achieve net zero carbon, one new windfarm must be built every nine months between now

and 2050. That’s an extraordinary amount of investment, requiring stable policy settings which support

the end objectives.


Any proposal to change market structure should be well thought through and soundly based. Given what

is at stake it is not the time for an experimental reset, especially when the current structure has delivered

such strong results.

SLIDE 10: INVESTING IN THE FUTURE

Turning now to investment.


Over the past 20 years there has been significant investment in new renewable generation, with Mercury

spending over $1.4billion on our geothermal assets alone. Much of this has been through joint ventures

with Iwi land trusts.


Similarly, suggesting hydro generation is 'free water' is simply not true. The dams require constant work

and major capital investment. Mercury has invested $300 million in our Waikato hydro assets over the

past decade. This investment both maintains and enhances our dams and power stations – an extra

50GWh has been gained, enough to power 30,000 electric vehicles each year.


2021 ASM – Chair & Chief Executive Address | 23 September 2021 | Page 5 of 8


Looking forward, more than $1.5billion is already committed by companies like Mercury, including our

Turitea windfarm which will be New Zealand’s largest. The new generation already being built means

more than 90% of electricity in New Zealand will be from renewable sources by 2025.


And that’s just the start. As I mentioned, the equivalent of one windfarm every nine months will be

required until 2050. There is a bright future, with windfarms, geothermal and some solar complementing

New Zealand’s backbone of hydro generation.


Mercury is committed to playing a leading role in New Zealand’s decarbonisation. I encourage our policy

makers to focus on how they can continue to ensure a market structure that incentivises the investment

New Zealand needs, and which is essential to our country’s response to climate change, in a way that

keeps electricity affordable and secure.


As shareholders you can be proud of your involvement in Mercury. We are investing to transition to a

lower carbon New Zealand for our children and grandchildren. Your support today is vital to leaving them

with a world of opportunity and hope that they can enjoy tomorrow.


Nga mihi nui, and I will now hand over to our Chief Executive, Vince Hawksworth.


[ADDRESS BY THE CHIEF EXECUTIVE: VINCE HAWKSWORTH]

CHIEF EXECUTIVE’S ADDRESS

SLIDE 11 – CHIEF EXECUTIVE’S REPORT

Thank you Chair.


Kia ora tatou katoa.


This is my second ‘virtual’ ASM since I joined Mercury as Chief Executive in March 2020. I am

disappointed that for a second year I won’t be able to meet you, our shareholders in person and share

those informal conversations over a cup of tea. However, I have heard feedback from some of those who

joined us online for last year’s meeting that this format made it easier for them to attend. I would like to

add my welcome to everyone and thank you for joining us.


Prue has spoken to you about the world we find ourselves in, the challenges of climate change and

energy market volatility. I’m going to talk about our business this year, in particular the ways we have set

out to be “thriving today” and “shaping tomorrow” in what was a challenging year for us in terms of

generating renewable electricity, and a tough year for many due to COVID.

SLIDE 12 – THE YEAR IN REVIEW

At our hydro power stations: it was the second consecutive year of low rainfall across the Waikato

catchment, and we can only work with the rain that falls. Despite the best efforts of the team who

manage river flows to our hydro power stations there was a significant decrease in hydro generation year

on year.


2021 ASM – Chair & Chief Executive Address | 23 September 2021 | Page 6 of 8

In geothermal: a fault put our Kawerau geothermal power station out of action during a period of high

demand and high prices, this loss of production also resulting in a loss in revenue. I must acknowledge

the commitment and experience of the teams involved who mobilised to get the station back up and

running quickly and safely, and those who supported them.


In the market, the past year was characterised by high wholesale prices, mostly as a result of low lake

inflows and constrained gas supply. While this has not impacted most household bills, it has challenged

industrial energy users and some businesses retailing electricity as Prue has noted.


Of course, to be able to sell it, you have to first generate it, and that lack of rain I mentioned earlier

meant that Mercury was low on generation while prices have been high. That is reflected in our earnings,

which are down from last year.

SLIDE 13 – THRIVING TODAY

Let’s take a look at some of the recent investment we are making in our power stations so that – weather

notwithstanding for our hydro – they continue to work hard for New Zealanders now and into the future:


• The seven-year, $75m upgrade of Karāpiro power station (currently scheduled for completion in

2025) will increase overall peak station capacity by 17% (enough to power approximately 19,000

homes);

• $24m was invested in Rotokawa and Nga Awa Purua geothermal power stations to add

renewable power output to each station while preserving the longevity of the field.


At these projects and with the ongoing construction of the Turitea Wind Farm, despite the various

lockdowns creating challenging working conditions for on-site teams, I am very pleased to say that there

were no serious harm injuries during FY21. The Total Recordable Incident Frequency measure dropped

significantly to 0.64 from 1.26 at the end of FY20. This speaks to the strong and growing safety culture

within Mercury teams, and their commitment to keep themselves and each other safe to return home at

the end of the day.


Turning now to our retail business. We continue to navigate a very competitive market, with our

competitors – including smaller independents – fighting hard for customers. Our total customer numbers

fell by 20,000 for the year to June. The competitive nature of the retail market has, I believe, driven

significant innovation across the sector in terms of how we serve our customers – the bundling of

products is one example of the evolution of our sector, directly in response to greater competition.


To this end, I would like to give credit to our dedicated customer team who have continued to think

outside the box and really hone in on customer-focussed propositions. Our recent Moves campaign –

focussed on supporting customers moving homes – has been a great example of this. That campaign

contributed to our best customer acquisition and retention performance since December 2017.


We believe competition will only intensify. Internationally, traditional retail energy providers are staring

down the changing face of competition as new entrants come into play – telcos, global tech giants, oil

companies. It’s something we have started to see here in New Zealand with the entry of Z Energy and

overseas participants into the retail electricity space. In order to compete, we need to remain ahead of


2021 ASM – Chair & Chief Executive Address | 23 September 2021 | Page 7 of 8

the game by deepening our connections to our customers through digital innovation, better use of data

and importantly maximising our value to customers beyond just a single product. More on that later.


We also remain focused on improvements that better support our customers. Over the year we launched

a customer care hub, built on our community engagement and deepened understanding of those

customers experiencing hardship. This work continues over a decade of focussed effort by a team of

dedicated individuals at Mercury, alongside our stakeholders in the community.


We are pleased with the progress of our company-wide programme to support continuous improvement,

aptly named Thrive. We continue to see teams setting aspirational goals and applying a critical lens to

improve and align our resources with those aspirations.


A good example of this is the Digital River, a digital simulation of the Waikato River and our hydro

stations, that models generation scenarios to help maximise efficiency and value to the company. Its

value has already been proven in gains at our Aratiatia power station, on the Waikato Hydro System.


We also recognise that for Mercury to thrive today and into the future, our culture needs to evolve to

support new ways of working. To this end, Mercury has begun a culture change programme called

Whakapuāwai (meaning ‘to thrive or evolve’) to create a culture that embraces learning, challenges

mindsets, lifts capability and celebrates curiosity.


Each of these examples demonstrates an openness to new ideas. Recognising the vital importance of

this outlook to a growing, evolving company.

SLIDE 14 – SHAPING TOMORROW

This year we have made acquisitions that will shape our future as a company.


In June we entered into a conditional binding agreement to acquire Trustpower’s retail business. This is

a significant opportunity for Mercury and our customers. The scale that we gain will accelerate our ability

to deliver the right product mix and value for customers, with the combined business providing about

780,000 connections across energy and telco. If completed, this transaction positions us well for a future

in which Mercury is able to continue to add meaningful value for our customers, and Mercury.


In August we acquired five wind farms, and a pipeline of development options from Tilt Renewables,

adding over 1,100GWh to our annual generation and making us one of New Zealand’s largest wind

power companies. Wind power is a natural complement for the Waikato Hydro System, that can be

managed to respond to the fluctuations in wind output. This efficient use of our portfolio will enable

further decarbonisation of New Zealand’s electricity generation.


Meanwhile, a key point of progress was celebrated at the Turitea Wind Farm last month when power

was generated for the first time. We look forward to the completion of the northern section in the last

quarter of 2021, with final project completion for the more challenging southern end of the site currently

scheduled for mid 2023.



2021 ASM – Chair & Chief Executive Address | 23 September 2021 | Page 8 of 8

SLIDE 15 – ROADMAP TO 2050

This new wind farm, and others in the pipeline from Mercury and our peers, will contribute to the goal of

net zero carbon emissions by 2050.


Bold thinking and fast action is required to transition from carbon emissions and fossil fuels.


Huge investment is also required, which is why the sector’s $1.5bn commitment so far is so important.

This alone will lift New Zealand to over 90% renewable by 2025.


Mercury is working carefully to build our pipeline of new renewables and support those who have fossil

fuel plants to exit that plant in an orderly way. We believe that with transparent business practices it is

possible to be competitors but also business partners, in building new renewable generation to

decarbonise the New Zealand economy. Genesis has signed a 20-year commitment to support the

construction of Mercury’s Kaiwaikawe Wind Farm, near Dargaville, and they have a similar arrangement

for output from our Waipipi wind farm in Taranaki.


As we plan, invest, innovate and partner to grow NZ’s carbon-free future, what we need as a business

and for you, who have invested in us, is certainty. As Prue said earlier, certainty and stability around

regulation and market structures, policy makers focused on creating an environment that supports

investment.


It is essential that policy, the market and all its participants continue to support the world leading

performance of the New Zealand electricity market; ensuring that we achieve our environmental goals,

keep the lights on for New Zealanders and all of this at the least-cost for consumers.


We are aware of the challenges facing New Zealand, and pivotal role that the energy sector must play in

moving meaningfully towards decarbonisation of the economy by 2050.


Mercury has grown significantly this year, with the acquisition of Tilt Renewables’ NZ assets and pipeline

and the conditional binding agreement to acquire Trustpower’s retail operations.


We have also grown in our outlook, our appetite for innovation. We are focused on strong partnerships

across the industry and beyond. Care for our customers remains the heartbeat of who we are.

I am tremendously proud of our people, and their commitment and drive.


Thank you for your attention.


Nga mihi nui.


I will now hand you back to Prue.

---

2

>
>

>

>

3

>
>

>

4

5

6

7

8
>

9

10

11

12

13
>

>

>

14

15

16

17

18

19

20

21

22

23

24

Data sourced from publicly available filings. Our datasets may not be complete. Automated analysis can produce errors. If you believe any data on this page is incorrect, please contact us at hello@nzxplorer.co.nz. For informational purposes only. Not investment advice.

Other issuers discussed similar conditions around this time

Matched by meaning across NZX announcement text, not keywords — based on our semantic index of announcement bodies.