The 10 Biggest Energy Company Bankruptcies
Running a multi-billion dollar energy company isn’t
easy. Just ask the executives in the corner suites of some of the
energy companies that have gone bust over the years. Some, like
Enron, were brought down because of insider malfeasance. A few,
like ATP, blamed damaging government policies, while others went
off the rails due to market forces that left the company and its
shareholders flat-footed, deep in debt, and eventually broke. Here
are the bankruptcies that will be etched into the tombstones of
failed energy fortunes for time immemorial.
1. Enron. Bankrupt December 2, 2001. Assets $65.5 billion
Enron grew from a simple pipeline company into the world’s largest
energy trader by using the Internet to buy and sell natural gas
and electric power to help utilities and industrial power users
hedge against price fluctuations. By 2000, Enron was worth an
astonishing $68 billion, but when the U.S. Securities and Exchange
Commission started investigating, it was revealed that much of the
money was based on shady accounting practices and un-recorded
losses. In one year, Enron’s stock price plummeted from more than
$90 to less than $1, resulting in $11 billion in shareholder
losses. The subsequent bankruptcy remains the largest in U.S.
history. CEO Kenneth Lay and fellow Enron executive Jeffrey
Skilling were convicted in 2006 of fraud and conspiracy. Lay died
from a heart attack while awaiting sentencing. Skilling is still
in prison.
2. Energy Future Holdings. Bankrupt April 29, 2014. Assets
$36.4 billion
Energy Future Holdings became the largest power producer in Texas
in 2007 after a $45 billion buyout of TXU Corp. But the company
struggled under the weight of $40 billion in debt after revenues
plunged due to lower prices for natural gas and electricity.
Energy Future Holdings was broken up in April under the terms of a
restructuring deal.
3. Pacific Gas & Electric Company. Bankrupt April 6, 2001.
Assets $36.1 billion
California’s largest publicly-owned utility went bust after
deregulation led the company to incur billions in debt. After
selling its gas power plants, the company had to buy power from
other energy companies. Buying at fluctuating prices and selling
at fixed prices led to losses and eventual bankruptcy. But
according to Time, wholesale prices eventually dropped, and the
day the company emerged from bankruptcy in 2004, its stock was
worth three times as much as when it filed for protection.
Related: The Biggest Energy Trading Disaster In History
4. Texaco. Bankrupt April 12, 1987. Assets $34.9 billion
Texaco started out in 1901 as the Texas Fuel Company and was
independent for 100 years before merging with Chevron in 2001.
However, in the 1980s, Texaco became embroiled in a legal battle
with Pennzoil, and ended up owing the company $10.5 billion. That
led to Texaco filing for bankruptcy, which at the time, was the
largest in U.S. history.
5. Calpine Corporation. Bankrupt December 20, 2005. Assets
$26.6 billion
In the mid-2000s, Calpine was the biggest owner of natural
gas-fired plants in the U.S. But soaring fuel costs led the
company to incur more than $22.5 billion in debt. The subsequent
bankruptcy filing followed the ouster of top executives after they
lost a fight with bondholders to use proceeds from asset sales to
buy fuel. The company received $2 billion in financing to allow it
to keep its plants supplying customers.
6. ATP Oil & Gas. Bankrupt April 17, 2012. Assets $3.6
billion
In 2009, ATP Oil & Gas, an offshore oil producer, refinanced
$1.5 billion in debt, with the goal of doubling its production to
50,000 barrels a day. Then came the BP Deepwater Horizon disaster.
A 2010 moratorium on deepwater operations in the Gulf of Mexico
meant ATP was not able to complete wells on its Titan production
platform. Forced to spin off Titan and borrow $350 million, ATP
spiralled downward, crushed by $2.7 billion in debt obligations.
In a Forbes article, ATP’s CEO blamed the Obama Administration and
“its illegal ban on deepwater drilling in the wake of the BP
disaster,” for the implosion of the company.
7. Patriot Coal. Bankrupt July 9, 2012. Assets $3.6 billion
As the largest producer of thermal coal in the eastern U.S.,
Patriot Coal was particularly vulnerable to low coal prices,
competition from cheap natural gas, a slowing U.S. economy and
tougher environmental rules. Patriot Coal lost money every year
since 2010, and in 2012 recorded a loss of $198.5 million. To stay
afloat during the Chapter 11 bankruptcy process, the company
received $802 million from three major banks.
8. James River Coal. Bankrupt April 8, 2014. Assets $1 billion.
Another victim of the U.S. coal downturn, James River Coal
declared itself bankrupt in April, 2014, having emerged from a
previous bankruptcy in 2004. The company listed $818.7 million in
debt after being forced to close a dozen mines. James River Coal
was granted a $110-million loan to keep operating under court
protection. At the time of the bankruptcy, the company's stock was
trading for 36 cents, compared to $60 a share in 2008.
Related: How Rising Interest Rates Could Spell the End of the U.S.
Energy Boom
9. OGX. Bankrupt Oct. 30, 2013. Debts $5.1 billion
Darling of Brazilian billionaire Eike Batista, OGX Petróleo e Gas
Participações SA filed for bankruptcy protection after failing to
reach an agreement with creditors to negotiate part of its $5.1
billion debt. The bankruptcy was the largest in Latin America. The
blow to Batista’s mining and oil and gas empire came after
disappointing output from offshore wells set off a crisis of
investor confidence.
10. Suntech. Bankrupt March 20, 2013. Debts $1.6 billion
The Chinese solar panel manufacturer, one of the world’s biggest,
was forced into bankruptcy court after the company missed a $541
million payment to bondholders. The company’s misfortunes were
blamed on a glut in the market for solar panels, which collapsed
prices. Another solar industry giant, Germany’s Q-Cells, was
caught in the downturn the year earlier.
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