2020-21 SaskEnergy Annual Report

Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements

Contract liabilities Advance receipt of customer capital contributions are recorded as a contract liability, as billing occurs prior to the construction of the associated customer facility. At the in-service date, a construction cost true-up is determined, with either a rebate issued to the customer or additional customer capital contribution collected from the customer. The contract liabilities are recognized as revenue at the in-service date of the customer facility with the exception of the potentially refundable amount over the applicable refund period. Refund liabilities At the construction in-service date of a customer facility, a portion of the customer capital contribution may be refundable to the customer over the refund period, if the customer meets or exceeds a predetermined flow of natural gas. At the in-service date, the potential refund remaining over the refund period is no longer presented as a contract liability but is presented as a refund liability. Annually, the actual volume of natural gas flowed is compared to the predetermined flow and the annual rebate is paid to the customer if actual flow exceeds the predetermined flow amount. In contrast, if the actual flow is less than the predetermined flow, the rebate is recorded as customer contribution revenue. o. Borrowing costs Borrowing costs that are directly attributable to the acquisition, construction or development of a qualifying asset are added to the cost of that asset, until it is available for use. Qualifying assets are those assets that take a substantial period of time to get ready for their intended use. As the Corporation borrows funds generally and uses them for the purpose of obtaining a qualifying asset, the borrowing costs are capitalized by applying its weighted average cost of debt. All other borrowing costs are recognized in finance expense in the period in which they are incurred. p. Lease liability and right-of-use assets A contract is or contains a lease if the contract conveys a right to control the use of an identified asset for a period of time in exchange for consideration. The Corporation has assessed its arrangements to determine whether they contain a lease. Right-of-use assets are initially measured at an amount equal to the lease liability and are adjusted for any payments made at or before the commencement date, less any lease incentives received. Right-of-use assets are depreciated over the related lease term. The Corporation has applied judgment to determine the lease term for contracts that include renewal options. The assessment of whether the Corporation is reasonably certain to exercise such options impacts the lease term, which affects the amount of lease liabilities and right-of-use assets recognized. The corresponding lease liability is measured at the present value of the lease payments that are not paid at commencement and are discounted using the Corporation’s incremental borrowing rate or the rate implicit in the lease. Each lease payment is allocated between the liability and interest so as to achieve a constant rate on the finance balance outstanding. The interest component is included in finance expense. The lease liability is remeasured when there is a change in future lease payments arising from a change in an index or rate, or if there is a change in the Corporation’s estimate or assessment of whether it will exercise an extension, termination, or purchase option. A corresponding adjustment is made to the right-of-use asset or is recorded in profit or loss if the carrying amount of the right-of-use asset has been reduced to zero. 4. CAPITAL MANAGEMENT The Corporation’s objective when managing its capital is to maintain financial stability through the effective management of liquidity and capital structure. The Corporation finances its capital requirements through internally generated funds and injections of capital from the Province, typically in the form of debt. Under The SaskEnergy Act , the Corporation may borrow up to $2,500 million of debt upon approval of the Lieutenant Governor in Council (2020 - $2,500 million). Within this limit, the Corporation may borrow up to $500 million in temporary loans (2020 - $500 million), including a $35 million uncommitted line of credit with Toronto-Dominion Bank (2020 - $35 million). As at March 31, 2021, the Corporation had $1,749 million of debt

p.62

Made with FlippingBook Ebook Creator