A multiparty cleanup site brings together companies and agencies which normally don’t want to be in business together. Add in the fact that they have a negative present value project and little hope for concluding the project quickly creates a challenge.
What if one party is financially weak? Privately-held? Or a liquidating trust?
Following the example of financial assurance tests for closing landfills (tests described in RCRA and State laws), newer CERCLA consent decrees contain a form of financial testing for the PRP group, ensuring parties are – as a group – solvent.
What if your company has a 5% share, and the next three largest PRPs are threatening bankruptcy? A likely outcome is that your 5% share will grow with each bankruptcy. A kind of musical chairs.
The accounting term is “counterparty nonperformance risk”.
What tools and processes can offset counterparty risk?
Simple.
Regular credit checks. Letters of credit from failing parties. Internal cashouts among PRP members.
We see this tracking as a good business decision where a few conditions justify the expense of periodic tracking:
• Future group cash calls above $5 million
• Privately-held parties have a combined allocation above 10%
• Three years or more before most cash calls are collected
• Long-term O&M, with annual cash calls over $500,000/year