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Introduction
The Euro Tunnel, also known as 'Channel-tunnel', is a series of three tunnels (two
carrying, one service tunnel) linking the southern coast of England near Folkestone to
the northern coast of France outside Calais.
The tunnels are 50km long, with an undersea section of 39 km, making it the longest
undersea tunnel system in the world.
The Euro-tunnel project was privately financed and continues to be privately
operated.
Group Eurotunnel S.A. manages and operates the Channel Tunnel between Britain
and France. The Company operates the car shuttle services and earns revenue on other
trains (freight by DB Schenker and passenger services by Eurostar) passing through
the tunnel. It is listed both on the London Stock Exchange and Euronext Paris.
The idea of a Channel Tunnel was first explored by French mining engineer, Albert
Mathieu, who formulated early designs for Napoleon in 1802.
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The first attempt to make a cross channel link was in 1880 when the Beaumont and
English tunnel boring machine began digging undersea tunnels on both sides of the
Channel. But the British military became increasingly concerned about national
security and the project was abandoned with no further attempts being made for
almost a century.
In 1974 work began again on the tunnel, but had to be abandoned shortly afterwards
due to financial problems.
Following announcements in 1981 by the French and British governments that a
cross-channel link would be explored, private companies were asked to tender for
contracts to construct and operate the tunnel link. In early 1986, Margaret Thatcher
and Francois Mitterrand announced that contracts had been finalized and work finally
began in mid 1986.
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Contract Complexities
The Channel Tunnel proposal was originally conceived as a combination of two
functions: financing and construction, so it is natural that the two groups of promoters
were banks and construction companies. The construction side was handled by a
massive consortium of 10 contractors called TransManche Link or TML for short,
together with five banks, making 15 founder shareholders who put up the initial
equity of £47 million. The founder share-holders were evenly divided between
English and French, like almost everything else in this project. It is important to look
at the network of legal contracts that define the project because in the early days
Eurotunnel as a company did not exist. All there was, was a series of contracts and a
number of dedicated staff all of whom were on secondment from the interested
parties. The Construction Contract outlined without any great definition, most of the
engineering work not just in digging the tunnel but also in setting up the physical side
of the operations. This was a design and build contract between Eurotunnel and TML.
The Anglo-French Treaty and the Concession set the framework within which
Eurotunnel operates. The Channel Tunnel Link shall be financed without recourse to
government funds or to government guarantees of a financial or commercial nature.
This was the only basis on which British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher would
accept the project. The Concession was originally for a period of 55 years but was
later extended to 65 years. It expires in 2052 and Eurotunnel then has to hand back
the system in good working order. The Treaty provided for the setting up of a bi-
national Intergovernmental Commission (IGC) and Safety Authority who monitor
Eurotunnel’s compliance with the Concession, and who have exercised considerable
power over Eurotunnel’s operations. The Railways Usage Contract provides
Eurotunnel’s only committed source of income. Under this Contract, Eurotunnel is
required to make half of the tunnel capacity available to the British, French and
Belgian railways for their Eurostar and freight trains. In return, the railways pay a
fixed charge and tolls based on the volume of traffic passing through the tunnel
together with a contribution to Eurotunnel’s operating costs. There is a minimum
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charge level, a mechanism to ensure a guaranteed level of cash flow to Eurotunnel
over the first 12 years of operation. The Contract will provide 35%–40% of
Eurotunnel’s expected revenues. The Partnership and Corporate Structure Agreements
govern the relationship between the various subsidiaries within the Eurotunnel Group,
and provide for a Joint Board for the Group. The Maitre d’Oeuvre (MdO) is an
independent Consulting Engineer who ad- vises the IGC, the banks and Eurotunnel on
construction safety, etc. The Concession was awarded by the British and French
governments to Eurotunnel in January 1986. One of the features that led to the award
was the financing plan and the very early commitment in principle by 31 leading
banks to underwrite the debt part of the funding.
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Financial & Economical Scenarios
The estimated £4.9 billion total cost of the tunnel turned out to be a serious
miscalculation, as the cost increased to almost £12 billion by the time it opened in
1994, more than double the original estimates. However, there were then delays,
disputes and spiralling costs until the project's completion in 1994.
Shares of Eurotunnel were issued at £3.50 per share on 9 December 1987. By mid-
1989 the price had risen to £11.00. Delays and cost overruns led to the share price
dropping; during demonstration runs in October 1994 the share price reached an all-
time low value. Eurotunnel suspended payment on its debt in September 1995 to
avoid bankruptcy. In December 1997 the British and French governments extended
Eurotunnel's operating concession by 34 years to 2086.
Financial restructuring of Eurotunnel occurred in mid-1998, reducing debt and
financial charges. Despite the restructuring, The Economist reported in 1998
that to break even Eurotunnel would have to increase fares, traffic and market
share for sustainability. A cost benefit analysis of the Channel Tunnel indicated that
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there were few impacts on the wider economy and few developments associated with
the project, and that the British economy would have been better off if the tunnel had
not been constructed.
In 1999 Eurostar posted its first ever net profits, having previously made a loss
of £925m in 1995.
In July 2003, a Eurostar train broke the record for the fastest train in the UK, reaching
208 mph during safety testing of Section One of the new Channel Tunnel Rail Link.
This section was completed ahead of schedule in December 2003.
However, plans to extend the routes followed by trains using the Channel Tunnel have
been slow to get off the ground.
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Problem Statements and Findings
Problem-1:
Do Eurotunnel’s shareholders deserve to be compensated for their losses?
Solution-1:
Eurotunnel’s shareholder deserves to be compensated for their losses. But not all
shareholders proved to be worse off. Any shareholder who bought at the time of the
original Offer for sale or early 1988 and then sold in the first half of 1989 would have
realized substantial capital gains. But the vast majority of shareholders have
undoubtedly incurred substantial losses on their investment. The financial statements
provide a historical record, but it seems clear that the share price reacted to events
announced in the media, rather than to the financial statement. If the November 1987
Offer for sale document had reported the estimated project cost for each of the year
construction, shareholders might have been in a better position to compare estimated
and actual construction costs and appreciate earlier significant problems faced.
Problem-2:
Discuss the proposition that agents have an incentive to be optimistic when proposing
large capital projects.
Solution-2:
Management was arguably successful in achieving completion of the project and
therefore maintaining their employment.
The history of large capital projects suggests that almost invariably, agents tend to
underestimate capital cost and overestimate revenues. Including more detailed
estimates of the phasing of capital expenditure at the outset would have given the
principal an opportunity to monitor actual expenditures compared to predict
expenditure and this would have improved accountability.
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Management incentives were determined at the beginning of the project and turned
out to be inappropriate, given the high construction costs.
Problem-3:
Which stakeholders were most adversely affected by Eurotunnel’s financial
difficulties?
Solution-3:
Among all the stakeholders, the shareholders potentially have the most to loss.
Shareholders were noticeably unsuccessful in terms of preventing the substantial
declines in net present value of their investments.
High construction costs did not provide sufficient incentives to protect the interests of
the shareholders.
Until the project opened a major uncertainty involved initial traffic volumes plus
growth rates. After operation had started the area of uncertainty reduced to growth
rates.
Eurotunnel is unable to service debt. There has also been uncertainty over the amount
of debt the banks will want to convert to equity. If the banks convert a relatively large
amount, interest charges will be lower but profit available for dividend will be
distributed over a large number of shares.
Problem-4:
Briefly outline the causes of Eurotunnel’s financial problems. Could, or should, these
problems have been foreseen?
Solution-4:
In 2004 Richard Shirrefs, chief executive of Eurotunnel, told BBC News that the
cross-channel rail industry was working on a "failed business model". He told Radio
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4's Today programme that "you can't have a £25bn infrastructure which is not
generating enough traffic - this is a big structural problem".
Construction of the tunnel started in 1988, the project took approximately 20%
longer than planned (at 6 years vs. 5 years) and came in 80% over budget (at 4.6
billion pounds vs. a 2.6 billion pound forecast).
The issues that caused delay and financial problems later on resulted from
various factors:
Changed specifications for the tunnel, there were needs for air conditioning systems
to improve safety that were not included the initial design.
The communication between the British and French teams who were essentially
tunneling from the two different sides and meeting in the middle could have been
improved. These sorts of communication issues are relatively common in delayed
projects when tensions rise.
When the tunnel was built it was assumed that traffic levels would have grown
rapidly enough to generate a healthy income for Eurotunnel. 2003's 6.3 million
rail passengers, though, fell far short of original predictions of 16 million a year.
The 1.7 million tonnes of freight carried in 2003 can be set against an initial
forecast of an annual 7 million.
Another interesting aspect of the Channel Tunnel’s forecasts were that a lot of
revenue was projected to come from driving the existing ferry operators out of
business. Of course, these ferry operators were the main way to cross the English
Channel before the Channel Tunnel existed. However, this analysis ignored the
possibility that the ferries would react to the Channel Tunnel with improved
pricing and service, leading to them retaining market share. In addition the
creation of budget airlines providing cheap air travel between UK and France was not
foreseen. It is a good reminder that in making strategic forecasts of benefits or results
you should bear in mind how competitors will react to the project you are envisioning.
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It should be noted that a great deal of the financial problems with the Channel
Tunnel were caused by overly optimistic revenue projections, on top of the
construction cost overruns, and those projections failed to anticipate that the set
of options for getting from Paris to London might change, both in reaction to the
tunnel and because of innovation in other areas such as the development of the budget
airline business model.
The tunnel wasn’t completely unprecedented. The Seikan Tunnel in Japan had similar
length and depth. Nonetheless, part of the reason for cost overrun was the absence
of many precedents and associated experience to base sound estimates off. It was
very difficult to predict accurately and complete the project in due time based on
initial estimates.
In fact, subsequently, the Channel Tunnel has been listed as one of the engineering
wonders of the world, which emphasizes its uniqueness.
Problem-5:
“Eurotunnel has been both a success and a disaster”. Discuss.
Solution-5:
Euro Tunnel is the finest engineering achievement of the 20th century as well as one
of the most expensive white elephants in the history.
Construction of the Eurotunnel was the realization of a centuries-old dream to connect
England and France. It is probably the most significant international transport project
since the Panama Canal, and the largest project ever paid for entirely by private
finance. Engineers have dreamed of building a Channel Tunnel for at least 250 years
which runs beneath the busiest shipping lane in the world. Between the dream and the
reality lay a dramatic and unimaginably complex engineering project.
In 1996 the American Society of Civil Engineers identified the tunnel as one of the
Seven Wonders of the Modern World. In 1999, Channel Tunnel was awarded first
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prize amongst the top 10 construction projects of the 20th century by an international
construction panel in the United States.
The Channel Tunnel promotes the trading connection between UK and France and
improves living conditions by cheaper and faster transport for both sides. The
construction as well the tunnel operation improves employment in the respective
regions. For such a great advantage of it, the project can be considered as a success.
But if we focus on the financial performances, we cannot express the same opinion.
The tunnel cost two times more to build than the most pessimistic original estimate.
Together with additional finance charges caused by the delays in completion, which
meant that no income was received despite all the money having been spent, the
tunnel that should have cost £6 billion ended up to an estimated final cost of around
£12bn. That meant that the revenue needed to break even was two times more than
projected.
Eurotunnel’s financial results have of course proved extremely disappointing, way
below the documented expectations of 1987-94. Once the trials of late opening and
the November 1996 fire had been overcome, Eurotunnel achieved a turnover of
around £600 million a year over the period 1998-2008, and an operating margin of
around 55 per cent. But turnover was way below the prospectus forecasts and after
depreciation and financial charges; losses were severe, averaging £137 million a year,
1998-2004, before exceptional items.
The volume of traffic is a fraction of what projected. Passenger and freight trains
through the tunnel are running at about a fifth of the projected numbers. The vehicle
shuttles are running at about a third of the projected numbers.
The tunnel expected to gain substantial income from the sale of duty-free goods at the
terminals. Duty free sales of alcohol and tobacco had always been a tremendous
money spinner for the ferry companies, making up a substantial part of their profits.
But the advent of the European Single Market spelt the end of duty free sales on
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journeys between two EU countries, so the duty free shops at each end of the tunnel
never provided the revenue that had been hoped for.
It was clearly a misfortune for Eurotunnel to embark on a long construction process
during a time of relatively high inflation, and then commence operating when the rate
of inflation fell and prices became more stable. In such a situation, the weight of the
debt burden remained stubbornly in place, creating difficulties for the owners of
capital as it became clear that revenues were likely to be insufficient to service the
debt.
With passenger and freight trains running at a fifth of the projected rate, passenger
and freight shuttles running at a third of the projected rate, duty free sales running at
zero, stuck with debts it could not afford to service and the capital cost of construction
running at two times that projected, the tunnel is an unmitigated financial disaster.
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