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business reporter Nassim Khadem

'Australia should have the lowest-priced energy in the world' says Atlassian co-founder after AGL rejects $8b takeover bid

Atlassian co-founder Mike Cannon-Brookes says an $8 billion takeover bid of AGL by his company and Canadian asset manager Brookfield will not push energy prices up. The bid was rejected by AGL's board on Monday. (ABC)

Billionaire businessman Mike Cannon-Brookes says he will continue to work with the board of energy giant AGL to pursue net zero electricity generation, arguing it could help Australia have the "lowest-priced energy in the world".

The co-founder of software company Atlassian says it would be one of the biggest decarbonisation projects globally and could be achieved by 2035.

AGL Energy on Monday rejected an $8 billion takeover bid by Mr Cannon-Brookes and Canadian asset manager Brookfield to accelerate the closure of AGL's major coal-fired power stations.

Mr Cannon-Brookes joined forces with Brookfield to put the takeover bid forward to AGL on Saturday, arguing that together they can fast-track the closure of AGL's remaining coal-fired generators, including the Loy Yang A brown coal generator.

The AGL board on Monday said the unsolicited proposal it received on Saturday morning "materially undervalues" the company and "is not in the best interests of AGL Energy shareholders".

That offer promised to get AGL out of coal by 2030, but AGL Energy Chairman Peter Botten said: "The proposal does not offer an adequate premium for a change of control and is not in the best interests of AGL Energy shareholders."

Shareholders had been due to vote in June on a plan to split AGL Energy into two companies.

Mr Botten said the AGL Energy board believed that under the "unsolicited" proposal, its shareholders would lose the opportunity to realise potential future value from the proposed demerger as both proposed organisations pursued "decisive action on decarbonisation".

The $7.50-a-share takeover bid was only pitched at a 4.7 per cent premium to AGL's closing share price on Friday.

In response, the company's board said it remained committed to progressing the proposed demerger of AGL Energy to establish two separately listed businesses, AGL Australia and Accel Energy, and considered the proposed demerger would deliver better value for shareholders.

"In the absence of a proposal that provides appropriate value to AGL Energy shareholders on a control basis, the board continues to believe the demerger maximises value for shareholders and is in the best interests of shareholders," AGL said in a statement to the stock exchange.

However, Mr Cannon-Brookes said the partnership's bid was a "far better option than the alternate path, which is the demerger that's on the table — from the point of view of risk and the point of view of shareholder value".

Atlassian's co-founders Scott Farquhar and Mike Cannon-Brookes.

Who is Mike-Cannon Brookes? Is he a climate change crusader?

Mr Cannon-Brooks, together with Scott Farquhar, founded Atlassian, the Australian software company that went global including a NASDAQ listing. 

It is believed Mr Cannon-Brookes's personal wealth — derived mainly through the success of his software company — is valued at $30 billion, putting him well up on Australia's Richest 250 List.

He has become known as a climate change crusader, long arguing that governments, business and individuals should be doing more to address climate change.

Famously, a Twitter bet that Atlassian made with Tesla boss Elon Musk in 2017 helped spark what was then the world's biggest battery in South Australia.

A Twitter bet Atlassian made with Tesla boss Elon Musk in 2017 helped spark the world's biggest battery in South Australia. (AP: Matt Rourke)

Mr Cannon-Brooke's personal investment venture, Grok Ventures, has backed a raft of businesses, including Zoox, Gottera, Brighte, SunDrive, Weavegrid, Who Gives a Crap, Canva and even Elon Musk's SpaceX.

He and his wife, Annie, have also committed $1.5 billion of their fortune to climate change philanthropy.

"Decarbonisation is a great economic opportunity facing Australia, but it requires vision and action," Mr Cannon-Brookes said after losing the AGL bid.

AGL operates massive coal-fired generators in New South Wales and Victoria that, together, account for about 10 per cent of Australia's total greenhouse gas emissions.

"That's more than every single car on the road," Mr Cannon-Brookes said.

"It's more than all domestic and international aviation, and if it's a country, it's bigger than Sweden or Ireland or New Zealand, and that would make it one of the biggest decarbonisation projects on Earth."

"We can [decarbonise] in an economic way that creates jobs and drives prices down. It's a very sensible plan."

Cannon-Brookes says he will spend $20b on move to renewable energy 

AGL plans to close the doors of its Bayswater coal plant in NSW's Hunter Valley by 2033, two years earlier than forecast, while Victoria's Loy Yang A facility is set to close by 2045.

In a statement, AGL Australia said it wanted to achieve a 50 per cent reduction in emissions by 2034 and Accel Energy (its generation business) would achieve a 55 to 60 per cent reduction in emissions by no later than 2034.

Loy Yang A power station in Victoria that is owned by AGL. (ABC Gippsland: Kellie Lazzaro)

Mr Cannon-Brookes said the consortium's plan was to decommission the Bayswater and Loy Yang plants earlier than already planned and that they would spend on renewables to make up for any lost capacity.

He said he had $20 billion to spend on "creating new renewable assets" that would help accelerate the plan so that Australia's main grid reaches net zero emissions by 2035.

"And, obviously, as a private company, we can do it a lot faster than as a public company," Mr Cannon-Brookes said.

"This is a massive decarbonisation effort. What we require is just the gumption to go for it and actually make it happen, which is what we're trying to do."

Will the plan push up energy prices?

Mr Cannon-Brookes was asked if the consortium's fast-tracked plan would push up power prices for businesses and households, following suggestions from some commentators that it could.

He said that while the consortium could not control market forces, "renewable assets generate power at far cheaper prices than the coal assets currently do" and that he believed this would bring the prices in the grid down over the long term.

"Obviously, we know we have a market price of power that goes up and down based on supply and demand," Mr Cannon-Brookes said.

"We are bringing significant supply here. So that should bring prices down in the long term."

"There's no logical reason, no economic reason [that] we should not have the cheapest power in the world, and that is [where] we're intending to go."

He also noted that Brookfield was "one of the largest managers and investors in this sort of transition asset around the globe".

"They've been doing this for many years, so we've got some pretty amazing partners to make this happen," he said.

Brookfield said in a statement that the offer represented about a 20 per cent premium to the three-month volume-weighted average price of $6.28 per share.

Traders use that statistic to determine the average price based on both price and volume.

Vice-chair of Brookfield Asset Management Mark Carney said that energy transition was one of "the biggest investment opportunities of our lifetime".

"It is estimated that more than $US150 trillion ($208 trillion) will need to be invested globally through 2050 to drive the decarbonisation of energy markets and our economy — that's approximately $US5 trillion every year," he said.

"The time to act is now. Investment firms such as Brookfield and Grok Ventures, with their access to capital and deep operating expertise and development capabilities in power markets and renewables, can make major contributions to businesses such as AGL to help them achieve their net-zero ambitions for the benefit of their shareholders, employees and the broader community."

He said the consortium remains optimistic that an agreement can be reached with AGL's board.

Coupled with Origin' Energy's decision to bring forward the closure of Eraring power station by 2025, Mr Cannon-Brookes said there would be enough dispatchable power in the grid to support renewables.

"We've liaised with both state and federal governments and we intend to be highly collaborative with them."

Macquarie Capital, Goldman Sachs and Herbert Smith Freehills are advising AGL Energy.

Professor Bruce Mountains says AGL takeover offer is a "watershed moment" for energy transition in Australia.
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