SaskEnergy 2018-19 Annual Report

NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

v. Customer Contributions The Corporation builds customer requested distribution and transmission facilities and the title, risks and rewards of these facilities remain with the Corporation at all times during and after construction, as permitted by The SaskEnergy Act . Any use or benefit that the customer obtains does not occur during the construction period, but thereafter when the connection is made to the customer’s property. It is at that point that the customer may use and benefit from the readily available natural gas. Therefore, the performance obligation is satisfied at the point in time when the customer specific facility connection is available for use by the Corporation and the service lines are available for the customer’s operations. Customer contributions received in advance of construction are initially recorded as a contract liability as they are generally paid at contract inception prior to construction commencing. When the construction of a customer connection reaches its in-service date, the customer contribution paid by the customer is removed from contract liabilities and is generally recognized into customer contribution revenue. There are cases when a refund is paid to the customer based on the customer contribution billed in advance exceeding actual construction costs. The transaction prices included in the contract with the customer are allocated to performance obligations based on the specific customer facility requests being made available for use. Customer contribution consideration is considered variable due to refunds issued to customers. Distribution service customer contributions With respect to distribution customer specific facilities, customers agree to pay, to the Corporation, the sum detailed in the contract with regard to the capital cost of assets which provide distribution services to the contributing customer. The contracts generally require the customer to pay all or a portion of the contract cost in advance of construction, in which case the Corporation records the deposit as contract liabilities until the point in time that the related assets are available for use. At this point, the Corporation reduces the contract liability and records customer contribution revenue. For some contract types, the Corporation may refund to a customer, a portion of the contributions depending on the volume of gas the customer consumes over a five year period of time. The potential refund amount is removed from the contract liability and reported as a refund liability. At the in-service date, the difference between the customer capital contribution revenue recognized and the associated amount cumulatively billed to the customer is recognized as an account receivable. The account receivable is then recognized as a reduction of revenue over the term of the delivery service contract. Transmission service customer contributions With respect to transmission customer specific facilities, customers agree to pay in advance to the Corporation, the sum detailed on the contract with regard to the capital cost of assets which provide transmission services to the contributing customer. The transmission customer contributions that are paid in advance of construction are initially recorded as a contract liability. The contributions received, less potential refunds, are recognized into revenue at the point in time the related assets are available for use. The Corporation may provide a refund to a customer for some or all of the contributions made depending on the volume of gas transported through the system. There is a refund period on contributions received and the amount of contributions expected to be refunded are estimated and recorded as a refund liability until it is earned by the customer. Refund liabilities that are not returned to the customer are recognized as customer contribution revenue at the expiration of the eligible refund period. At the in-service date, the difference between the customer capital contribution revenue recognized and the associated amount cumulatively billed to the customer is recognized as an account receivable. The account receivable is then recognized as a reduction of revenue over the term of the transportation service contract. Five year refund period At the in-service date, a customer may begin to flow natural gas and earn a refund over a five year refund period. The amount potentially refundable to the customer is removed from contract liability and is recognized as a refund liability and reviewed annually. If the customer’s actual flow of natural gas exceeds what they committed to at contract inception, the customer will earn an annual refund. The refund liability is reduced and a rebate is paid to the customer. If they flow less natural gas than they committed to at contract inception, the customer does not earn their rebate and the Corporation recognizes the annual refund liability amount as customer capital contribution revenue.

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