I would now like to hand the conference over to Mr. Rob Buchanan, Chief Executive Officer. Please go ahead.
Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us as we run through our financial and operating results for the 12 months that ended 31 December 2024. I'm joined here today by our Chief Financial Officer, Alexa Preston, and today we will speak to the presentation we disclosed on the NZX this morning. In the usual format, I'll cover off our company highlights and the operational update before Alexa covers the financials in more detail. I'll then take you through our strategic highlights before we have some time for questions at the end. Let's start with our financial highlights on page three. We've seen revenue increase 7% to NZD 139.8 million and delivered EBITDA growth of 9% to NZD 95.1 million, in line with the upper end of guidance. This represents an impressive EBITDA margin of 68%.
Normalized free cash flow remains strong at NZD 63.4 million, with free cash flow conversion remaining high at 67%. Today, the board has declared a final dividend of NZD 0.066 per share, which, together with the interim dividend, represents a total 2024 ordinary dividend of NZD 0.11 per share, up from NZD 0.105 in 2023. 2024 has been a year of significant delivery for Channel, and I'm proud that we continue to make significant progress towards our vision of becoming a world-class energy infrastructure company. Page four outlines a view of the highlights as we focused on executing our refresh strategy in 2024. Importantly, we maintained our strong safety track record, seeing everyone home safely every day. Growth in jet fuel demand continued, with demand for diesel and petrol remaining relatively stable. Back in October, we shared with the market advisory the updated long-term fuel forecast.
This forecast indicates an additional 2.3 billion liters of fuel would flow through Channel's infrastructure over the next 26 years, which equates to an additional 145 million liters per year over the next 10 years. Our track record for safe, on-time, and on-budget delivery of capital projects remains steadfast. We executed against our growth strategy with NZD 120 million before PPI indexation worth of new storage contracts signed across the year. We refinanced our bank debt, lowering our interest costs. We successfully raised NZD 50 million of capital to fund our new contracts and helped position Channel to participate in additional on-strategy growth opportunities should they eventuate. We developed and released our Marsden Point Energy Precinct concept, which confirmed what we've known for some time. Our Marsden Point site is unique and well-positioned to support New Zealand's energy transition and resilience.
This has been endorsed by the New Zealand government with their recent announcement that Marsden Point could become one of the first special economic zones should these be introduced in time. We now have a long-term pathway to unlock the significant value of our site as high-quality tenants are attracted to the 120 hectares of unutilized land and ancillary services we can provide. Our energy precinct could help underpin New Zealand's energy and fuel security and resilience, as well as create significant economic value both for Northland and New Zealand. We entered into a conditional project development agreement with the Seadra Consortium, made up of Seadra, Qantas, Renova, Kent, and ANZ, to develop a biorefinery at Channel's Marsden Point site. Should this go ahead, Channel would be the landlord and the provider of infrastructure and services.
Reflecting some of this additional value that we in the market are beginning to understand, our 2024 accounts included a NZD 0.69 per share uplift in our net tangible assets. There's a lot to talk about, so let's get started. Safety underpins everything we do at Channel, so let's discuss safety first on page five. With our commitment to getting everyone home safely every day, we've seen zero process safety incidents. In 2024, we focused on increasing the reporting of incidents, including minor incidents and near misses. You can see this in the increase in total recordable case frequency. This ensures we take every opportunity to learn and prevent incidents in the future. Moving to our operational metrics, we've seen throughput up 100 million liters, reflecting stable diesel and petrol demand and growing jet demand.
We've seen an increased number of larger long-range vessels calling at our jetty and fewer ship movements overall following the commissioning of more storage last year. Channel is the only import terminal in New Zealand capable of accepting this larger class of long-range vessels, which improves supply chain efficiencies for our customers as they can bring in larger parcels with fuel and fewer shipments. According to global benchmarking we've undertaken, and consistent with our world-class operator ambition, we continue to deliver pipeline and tank availability statistics in line with some of the best import terminals in the world, which is something we're very proud of. Moving to slide six. On page six, we look at our throughput trends. Despite the current economic environment and jet aircraft availability issues, jet demand increased 12% on 2023 and was 8% ahead of advisory forecasts.
This reflects the number of flights tracking higher than growth in passenger numbers. Notwithstanding the difficult economic environment last year, petrol and diesel demand has remained relatively stable and broadly in line with the advisory forecast. Moving on to page seven. Our mantra at Channel is to deliver our projects safely first and then on time and on budget. Given the high inflation environment we've just been through over the past few years, I'm very proud of the Channel team's track record of delivering large, complex, multi-year capital projects on budget and on time, with safety at the forefront of all that we do. Across our growth and maintenance CapEx portfolio, last year we invested NZD 55 million into our infrastructure, which not only provides good returns for shareholders but improves the long-run resilience and fuel security for New Zealand.
Now I'll hand over to Alexa to take you through the financials.
Thanks, Rob. Looking at the P&L on page nine, we have delivered another strong set of results with an EBITDA margin of 68%, up slightly on the prior period. Depreciation has increased as assets have been capitalized, with the bulk of the conversion work now complete and private storage coming into service in the second half of last year. Our financing costs have also increased, reflecting both higher net debt and moderately higher interest rates. As we have been signaling for some time now, the legacy Wiri lease expires at the end of this month. The Wiri lease was entered into in 1990 when, at that time, Refining NZ constructed the Wiri terminal on behalf of the fuel company. At expiry, the ownership of the Wiri terminal assets will revert to BP, Mobil, and Z Energy.
The pro forma table at the bottom of this slide shows Channel's 2024 numbers, excluding the impact of the legacy Wiri lease. This legacy arrangement is not in any way related to Channel's strategy to grow outside our Marsden Point footprint through acquisition, nor does it impact on the operation of the Auckland fuel supply chain. Moving to page ten, we saw revenue increase 7% to NZD 139.8 million, reflecting the benefit of PPI indexation, higher throughput, and increased contracted storage revenue. With over 100 million liters of contracted storage commissioned over the last two years, contracted storage revenue increased by NZD 6.2 million. Operating costs increased by NZD 1.2 million, with increased investment in world-class capability, ongoing inflationary pressures, and increased compliance costs. Pleasingly, the fuel security study has now been successfully concluded, with associated costs of around NZD 500,000 incurred in FY24.
Let's look at the key balance sheet and cash flow metrics on page 11. Our balance sheet remains strong and our cash flow is stable. We successfully refinanced our bank debt during the course of 2024, expanding our lender group, extending the tenure of our facilities, and increasing our headroom. Importantly, the refinance lowered the cost of drawn facilities by 0.6% per annum. Our NZD 50 million capital raise in December was strongly supported by both existing and new shareholders and demonstrated investors' support of our company strategy and our proven track record of delivery. Following receipt of the proceeds from the equity raise, net debt as at 31 December closed at NZD 296 million. Leverage sits at 3.1 times EBITDA in line with our commitment to targeting credit metrics consistent with the Shadow BBB+ credit rating. Normalized free cash flow continues to be strong at NZD 63.4 million.
The board has declared an unimputed ordinary final dividend of NZD 0.066 per share, taking total dividends for the year to NZD 0.11 per share, representing a 5% increase in ordinary dividends year on year and a dividend payout ratio of 69%. Page 12 provides the detail of our investment in resilience and growth. Sustained business capital expenditure ended at NZD 12.3 million on an accrual basis, with NZD 11 million of cash CapEx for the year in line with guidance. Growth and conversion capital expenditure was NZD 42 million and included bund and firefighting upgrades and works associated with the TransMix and Z Energy storage contracts. We announced a number of growth projects across FY24, so we have also provided an indication of the growth capital expenditure profile over the coming years as we commence these projects. Moving to slide 13.
As we announced a few weeks ago, given increased confidence in the long-term fuel outlook and in recognition of the port-adjacent nature of Channel's unutilized land, the 2024 financial accounts reflect a combined NZD 381 million uplift in the fair values of the import terminal system and unutilized land, resulting in net tangible assets per share of NZD 1.98 at 31 December. Let me finish up with our FY25 guidance on page 14. The advisory fuel demand outlook indicates a 5% increase in throughput for FY25. Channel remains cautious about the current economic environment and ongoing aircraft availability issues, and as a result, we assume jet fuel demand in line with '24. We expect EBITDA from continued operations to be in the range of NZD 89 million-NZD 94 million, compared to NZD 95 million for FY24 or NZD 89 million, excluding the legacy Wiri lease revenue which ends tomorrow.
This principally reflects the benefit of PPI indexation on all contracted revenue and a full-year contribution from the TransMix next contract, which was brought into service in late Q4 last year. The guidance range also takes into consideration the contracted step-down and the fixed fee component of our import terminal revenue from 1 April 2025. The Meridian Battery project is now being commissioned, and while we anticipate benefiting from transmission savings as a result of this, these savings will be partially offset by ongoing double-digit inflationary price increases in transmission and distribution costs passed on by lines companies. The board has also made the decision to invest for growth, including commercial and legal support relating to the emerging portfolio of growth opportunities for the company.
As we signaled last year, given the growth profile of our business and continued investment in new assets, it makes more sense to guide on CapEx as a percentage of revenue. Steady-state business capital expenditure for FY25 is expected to be between 8%-10% of revenue, and the normalized free cash flow conversion factor is expected to be broadly in line with FY24. Looking beyond FY25, by 2027, an additional $8 million of revenue per annum will be generated from the new contract signed in 2024. I'll now hand back to Rob to take us through the progress we have made on our strategy.
Thanks, Alexa. You're all familiar with page 16, which is our company strategy, released to the market in 2023, and you'll see our team has done a great job executing on this during 2024. We keep putting this slide in our presentation decks because it's a reminder of our laser focus on delivering against our strategy and staying focused on those areas that will see us create long-term value for our shareholders. Over the coming slides, I'll cover delivery across 2024, as well as our priorities moving forward. Moving on to page 17. Again, these graphs should all be familiar to you. The throughput chart is advisory fuel demand forecast going out to 2060. This was updated in October and continues to show that Channel's business will be underpinned by jet fuel demand and the need for a liquid fuel decarbonization pathway for aviation in the long term.
Our contracted revenue chart on the left-hand side also shows that around 50% of our revenue is now projected to be independent of fuel throughput volume. This time last year, we released an Investor Scorecard for you to measure our delivery against our refreshed strategy. Everything that we do depends on our people and their engagement and belief in the strategy. As you can see, we've delivered a further 5 percentage point uplift in engagement this year, taking the total of our engagement score since the conversion to an import terminal to 26 percentage points, which is very pleasing. We've targeted 10% growth in contracted new storage volumes and exceeded that across the three growth projects we announced last year. Our customers are incredibly important to our success and our future growth ambitions. They are large global companies with world-class expectations of our operational delivery.
When we launched our refreshed strategy 18 months ago, we said we would look to increase our customer performance, which is a key enabler for us in our strategy to grow beyond Marsden Point, and we've made great progress here. So you can hold us to account next year. We have outlined our 2025 targets on the right-hand side of this slide, where we plan to continue delivering on our ambitious performance targets as we strive to become a world-class operator. As you know, we've been laser focused on opportunities that deliver above-WACC returns and customer contracts that provide revenue certainty. On slide 19, you can see how successful the team has been at delivering on these nearer-term opportunities to infill our existing site and repurpose and further utilize our existing infrastructure, building on the capability we have as a high-hazard site operator.
Most recently, and alongside our recent capital raise, we entered into a 15-year capacity-based contract with Higgins to provide bitumen terminaling services at Marsden Point. The bitumen terminal will consist of jetty line work to facilitate the importation of bitumen, bitumen storage facilities, and a truck loading facility. This new contract is an important step in the delivery of the Marsden Point Energy Precinct and represents a diversification of what we do at Channel, as well as our first new customer since conversion. Including the Higgins contract, the Channel team have signed three contracts over the course of 2024 that will deliver an estimated NZD 120 million in incremental revenue before PPI indexation over a 15-year period. Together, these three contracts require investment of between NZD 55 million to NZD 66 million of incremental growth capital and result in around NZD 11 million uplift in revenue per annum from 2027.
I'm proud that the team could deliver these growth opportunities in such a short time frame. Notably, the TransMix upgrade was completed in December, safely, to schedule and on budget, and this revenue is now included in our 2025 guidance. Looking at page 20, this is the energy precinct concept that we released to the market last October with the addition of the bitumen terminal. It was great to have the government endorse this vision with their announcement on Tuesday that they are considering a special economic zone at Marsden Point, and we're looking forward to seeing where their policy development goes next and how this can help us deliver the precinct projects in the future. There are many and varied opportunities for Channel to support New Zealand's energy transition, and the energy precinct concept outlines the exciting potential for these to fit together on our highly strategic site.
Shareholders will see opportunities for even more fuel storage, a lower-carbon future fuels manufacturer, as well as a range of energy projects such as electricity firming and storage opportunities that are good for Channel and good for New Zealand. Turning to slide 21, we're very pleased to see the release of the findings of the government fuel security study this week. Shareholders may be aware that the government is currently consulting on increasing the amount of diesel storage that fuel companies are required to hold in-country from the 21 days currently to 28 days, representing the equivalent of an additional 70 million liters of onshore storage. Should this become government policy, we would like to support our customers to meet this additional obligation. On Tuesday, we welcomed a New Zealand government announcement regarding a new special economic zone in the Marsden Point Energy Precinct.
This is an acknowledgment of the important role our highly strategic infrastructure plays in providing energy resilience, as well as the significant economic development benefits our future plans could have. The announcement referenced the range of options to make up a special economic zone, including business-friendly regulations, infrastructure and facilities, investment support, and customs and trade facilitation. While our ambitions for the energy precinct will continue to proceed without a special economic zone, if one were put in place, it could accelerate the delivery of our vision for Marsden Point as an energy precinct and create further jobs in Northland. Research undertaken by PwC has found that the development of the Marsden Point Energy Precinct projects could generate GDP of around NZD 3.3 billion and contribute around 20,000 FTE jobs over the 10- to 15-year construction phase.
Once fully operational, the projects could generate around NZD 290 million annually in GDP and contribute around NZD 1,150 full-time equivalent jobs. We look forward to seeing more detail about how a new special economic zone might work in due course. The fuel security study also confirmed what we've been saying for some time, that re-establishing an oil refinery or developing a new oil refinery for indigenous crude would be inefficient due to either high costs or limited effectiveness. Turning now to growth and energy resiliency initiatives we have underway. There are a number of work streams actively underway, and today we wanted to provide you with some important updates on page 22. Shareholders may have noted the space for a diesel peaker within the energy precinct concept released last year.
The team have recently completed a scoping study on this option, reflecting the significant advantage of investment already made in diesel import and storage infrastructure at Marsden Point. To give you a perspective of the magnitude of our storage capacity at Marsden Point, it's the energy equivalent to that of New Zealand's largest electricity storage lake, Lake Pukaki, if all of our unutilized storage was contracted. Channel's proposed model for the project would result in the company receiving capacity payments for making the plant available to potential customers. This model incentivizes needed peaking capacity while ensuring the wholesale market risk is appropriately passed to industry players who can offset the risk. Channel would only proceed with building the plant if there is contracted interest from electricity market participants.
The project would make use of the available capacity in the 220 kV transmission line to Marsden Point from Auckland, Channel's existing import terminal infrastructure, including redundant electricity connection assets and the significant in-country reserves of fuel already stored at Marsden Point. Let me just reiterate, though, Channel has no intention to take electricity market risk and will only develop the project if there is market interest in seeing it delivered. Work with Fortescue remains ongoing as they consider the project to develop an eSAF manufacturing facility at Marsden Point, and we understand this project remains a priority. Interestingly, New Zealand's Energy Efficiency and Conservation Authority reported on a study in January this year assessing the impact of the demand response options for the eSAF project.
The report indicates that Fortescue's project, should it include demand response features, could reduce electricity transmission constraints in Northland, providing up to NZD 100 million benefit and potentially save electricity consumers NZD 800 million per annum by 2045. We expect the Fortescue project to progress over a longer time frame than some of the other growth opportunities we are working towards. Our team continues to discuss commercial storage and other development projects at Marsden Point with a range of potential customers and counterparties. We also remain committed to pursuing the acquisition of terminal assets outside of Marsden Point, subject to them meeting our disciplined investment criteria of generating returns above our weighted average cost of capital with contracted customer revenues.
Moving to page 23, back in October, we entered into a conditional project development agreement with Seadra Energy and partners Qantas, Renova, Kent, and ANZ to develop a biorefinery at Channel's Marsden Point site. If this goes ahead, it is an exciting opportunity for Channel to create value for shareholders, both through the sale of our decommissioned assets and revenue from long-term contracts from the use of our land and other infrastructure. I can't give you a probability of this project going ahead, but what I can tell you is Seadra are currently targeting an investment decision in the second half of this year.
We've been working with the Seadra Consortium on their storage and infrastructure requirements for the biorefinery, and it's important for investors to be aware that a significant portion of any proceeds from asset sales are likely to be reinvested in already provisioned early demolition of certain assets and growth CapEx associated with the provision of infrastructure and storage assets to the biorefinery, consistent with our usual criteria of needing above-WACC returns and long-term contracts. Finally, looking at slide 24, I've said before how we do business is just as important as what we do. I'd encourage investors to read our 2024 sustainability report, also released to the market this morning, where we outline our progress against the key pillar of our strategy to be a good neighbor and good citizen.
We recommitted to our net zero by 2030 target and added another two ambitious goals focused on gender representation and remediation of the legacy hydrocarbon plume on our site. As we conclude our presentation today, I wanted to take a moment to recognize the hard work and dedication of the entire Channel Infrastructure team. Our success as a company is a direct result of how we come together as one team and work hard every day to deliver for our shareholders, community, and New Zealand. With our commitment to world-class operations and disciplined capital management and our strong team, we are positioned well to make the most of the opportunities ahead. And with that, I'd now like to open up the phone line for any questions that you may have.
Thank you. If you wish to ask a question, please press star one on your telephone and wait for your name to be announced. If you wish to cancel your request, please press star two. If you're on a speakerphone, please pick up the handset to ask your question. Your first question comes from Andrew Harvey-Green with Forsyth Barr.
Morning, Rob and Alexa. Just a couple of questions from me. First of all, I guess hoping you might be able to give us a little bit more color on Seadra and Fortescue. First of all, in terms of the Seadra Consortium, are you able to indicate whether the feedstock issue has been resolved or not? I realize there's a number of work streams ongoing, but is that one that an appropriate feedstock's been found?
Yeah, I can tell you they've moved from working on MOUs through to draft contracting. Okay.
That's useful. Thanks. And I guess the second question on that is, I know you can't give a probability, but are you more confident now compared to when the deal was first announced back in October last year?
Well, I said I wouldn't give a probability, Andrew, and that sounds like giving a probability. I think we've given you or articulated for you on the page all of the work streams that are ongoing, and you can see there is a lot of work from the Channel side ongoing. So I think that should give you a sense of how seriously we are taking the project. From our perspective, there's a lot of work to do on site preparation and rerouting of services to make the piece of land that we've allocated to them available to them and to ensure that we don't interfere with import terminal operations.
In addition to that, there's quite a bit of work to do around some ancillary infrastructure that they've asked us to provide, notably quite a bit of storage, and we need to work through pricing, costing, technical feasibility, and those types of things. So I think you should take some comfort from the fact there's a lot of work going on from the Channel team on those things at the moment.
Yeah. Okay. No, that sounds good. Thanks. And just on Fortescue, is there any sort of deadline for them to, I guess, complete their work?
Yeah. Well, look, we continue to work with them, and there are periods where we have opportunities to sort of check in on the progress and decide how we want to continue.
One of the interesting things that's emerged is that the biorefinery would make quite a bit of high-quality CO2, which would be incredibly useful for the Fortescue project. And so those two parties are now talking to each other as well around how they could work together.
Okay. That sounds good. And last question from me, I guess, again, focused on these, I guess, opportunities. You raised the potential for a diesel peaker. What sort of size are you looking at? And I'm just, I guess, cognizant that we already have a pretty large diesel peaker sitting at Whirinaki. Admittedly, it's got issues around diesel storage down there, but yeah, give us a bit more color around that.
Yeah. I mean, let's start with the why. So you've got 1 billion liters a year of diesel throughput at Marsden Point.
So from a fuels perspective, you don't even have to worry about the fuel being there. And it's also, I would suggest, one of the lowest-cost sites in terms of imported delivery of diesel fuel into New Zealand. In the scoping work, we've got different options as to scale. And probably the way I would characterize it is there's up to 75 megawatts of project that utilizes a lot of the existing refinery connection infrastructure and substation infrastructure that we actually already have on our site. And so that makes it particularly cost-effective and attractive because you don't need to rebuild or repurpose that infrastructure. And so it really depends on market appetite. You can scale it up quite a bit from there, but there's additional cost in terms of added connection infrastructure. Yeah. Okay. That's great. I have a few detailed accounting questions, but I'll take those offline.
Thanks.
Thanks, Andrew.
Your next question comes from Neville Gluyas with Jarden.
Good morning, team. Hopefully, you can hear me. Apologies for the comment.
You're perfectly audible.
Excellent. Okay. Just a question, first of all, on guidelines, sorry, guidance. Flat volume assumed and guidance for JET. Should we assume flat also for petrol and diesel?
Hi, Neville. It's Alexa. Look, we've been really transparent with the volume that we've assumed for FY25. In previous years, we assume in line with advisory for petrol and diesel. But I think our comments on JET echo comments from other issuers that are related with Air New Zealand and Auckland Airport releasing last week. I think you'll find out our sentiment in line with this.
Great. Okay. And also on guidance, obviously, some OpEx investment, which makes sense in the strategic energy precinct concept.
Can you give us some idea of roughly the scale of that and how long we should sort of incorporate that into our models? How many years?
Yeah. Great question. I think it's really important to understand that this investment is not ongoing. We're at a point in our company's strategy where we have the opportunity to capitalize on a number of potential projects. We're very clear about what we will and won't invest in. I think you've seen us deliver three of those projects last year and the discipline that we've exercised around that. We've spoken this morning about the potential diesel peaker. There's been a scoping study done. It does require investment to unlock some of these opportunities, but certainly, we're not anticipating this as a structural change in our cost base.
Yeah. Neville, one sort of point of reference I'd give you is so we talk a lot about in this presentation and, in fact, in the business about safely on time on budget. And to do that, you need to do your homework before you commit to a project. And so if you think about when the government was tendering its strategic diesel storage about a year ago, that cost us around NZD 500,000 in front-end engineering and design costs and commercial costs to make sure that we had a proposition that when we come to shareholders, we can put our hand on hearts of that's what it's going to cost to deliver it. So that's the type of thing that you invest in because it's on strategy. It's attractive business for us.
Consistent with our track record of delivering safely on time on budget, we need to expend a little bit to make sure we're doing that.
To perhaps not put words in your mouth, but to give some idea, obviously, you've got that NZD 500,000 on feed, NZD 500,000 of OpEx around the strategic fuel study supporting that. If we say sort of NZD 1 million of cost pressure last year, would we be talking similar kind of cost pressure for the sort of investment in the strategic energy precinct this year?
I think, as I said before, we've been quite clear about the opportunities that we have in the near term to capitalize on. They're quite different in nature from the examples we've just provided with regard to the cost. And I think investors can take comfort that we exercise incredible cost discipline in this business and will only invest in support for projects where we think there's a genuine prospect for converting that into a live opportunity. So I won't give dollars around that investment, but the investment range is captured within our guidance range.
Okay. Okay. Moving along then to Seadra. Thanks for the sort of updating color there. If you look at the timelines you've put on slide 23, there's talk about financing, which looks as though it stretches towards the latter half of this year. Does that mean any change to sort of when you expect Seadra might commit or not commit to the project?
No. No, not at all, really. I think this is a timetable that hopefully is deliverable.
And I think all I'd say, Neville, actually, is the biggest constraint on delivery or sort of timeframe from this project, from our perspective, is there's an enormous amount of work to do at Channel to make sure that we can integrate it with the import terminal without impacting the import terminal operations. And so we just need to be a bit careful about our timeframes to make sure that this is really attractive business for us, but we don't want to impact our existing business.
So in terms of how investors should think about it, still, if I recall correctly, the end of July that we should think is sort of the hard end date for this option?
Well, that's the formal end of the option that we have with Seadra, correct?
So once we get to that, we've got some commercial options to work out where we go next with it.
Okay. Thanks for the color. Just sticking with the strategic energy precinct, the biodiesel option, it sounds interesting. The commercial model, just a bit of extra color if that's possible. Are you suggesting that it would be Channel that invests in the plant in return for sort of capacity payments? And if so, that would have to be a long-term set of capacity payments, I'm assuming, to avoid kind of a recontracting risk five or 10 years down the track. Is that the right way to think about it? If you can find a consortium of generators keen, and I imagine there are some, that you'd be looking at sort of a 20 or 25-year contracting/lease term?
I won't talk to Jenna for what it will end up being, but yes, yes, and yes in terms of yes, we would only contract if we could cover our capital costs and income costs associated with it. So we're not going to take residual asset risk with this. From our perspective, we've seen there's a problem that the New Zealand electricity sector is trying to solve, and there was some discussion about LNG, and what made LNG uncompetitive was the significant amount of infrastructure investment required amortized over a small amount of energy. What we have at Channel is all of that infrastructure cost already sunk and latent capacity, and in fact, the fuel already here, and so we don't want to become an electricity market participant. We've got no ambition to be a developer of generation assets.
We would own and operate and make this asset available to that sector if there was demand for it. We cover our capital cost and our above-hurdle return consistent with our usual objectives.
Super clear. Thank you.
Your next question comes from Cameron Parker with Craigs Investment Partners.
Morning, guys, and congratulations on a massive year. Just a couple for me, really, is talking to the commercial and legal costs and skills that are required to deliver the projects. And it's quite a broad range of projects across the energy precinct. How comfortable are you in terms of upskilling that team and how you're seeing the market fulfilling those skills you need across those various projects to feed in not only the engineering but the commercial side and legal side as well?
Thanks, Cam. So what I'd start with saying is we have an incredibly talented and competent team at Channel. However, the spectrum and breadth of the opportunities we have ahead of us, as you've identified, is incredibly wide-ranging and requires specialist input. And for quite some time now, we've operated a model where we outsource the key work streams for those specialists in order to make sure that we're treating your OpEx lines with the care and respect they deserve, but also to make sure that we have the right people at the table at the time where we're forming up the commercial frameworks for these projects.
Okay. All right. Thanks. Thanks, Alexa. And just the last one.
Sorry, I was just going to say, I mean, the key principle we've taken with these is clearly there's quite a wide set of growth opportunities ahead of us.
We've got some non-permanent costs that we're incurring to make sure that we can deliver on those well. If that opportunity were to turn the other way and we go back to much more of a BAU type of operation, then because that cost is outsourced, it can disappear from the OpEx line.
Yeah. Yeah. Okay. All right. Thanks, guys. Just the last one is really you've seen a NZD 1 million decrease in transition charges coming from MEL's Battery. They're reaching FID on a similar-sized solar farm over the next few months. Do you factor that into your OpEx going forward in terms of a potential reduction of the same magnitude, or how are you looking at that?
That project, as you've identified, is not yet confirmed, and we certainly don't bake ideas into our OpEx. I think would be how I'd frame that.
No, we're not taking into consideration any further reductions. And certainly, if that project does meet investment decision, then it would take some time to construct and come on stream.
Yeah. Yeah. No, that's fair enough. That's fair enough. All right. Thanks, guys. That's all from me.
Thanks, Cam.
Well, thanks, everybody. I think that's all the time we have for questions. So thank you very much. That does conclude our conference for today. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect.