IFRS 11 AND MINING JOINT ARRANGEMENTS

Similar documents
IFRS 11 AND OIL AND GAS JOINT ARRANGEMENTS

IFRS 11 AND REAL ESTATE AND CONSTRUCTION JOINT ARRANGEMENTS

AASB 11 MINING JOINT ARRANGEMENTS

3 This IFRS shall be applied by all entities that are a party to a joint arrangement.

PUBLIC BENEFIT ENTITY INTERNATIONAL PUBLIC SECTOR ACCOUNTING STANDARD 37 JOINT ARRANGEMENTS (PBE IPSAS 37)

ASSURANCE AND ACCOUNTING ASPE - IFRS: A Comparison Joint Arrangements and Associates

Joint Arrangements. Exposure Draft 51. IFAC Board. October 2013 Comments due: February 28, 2014

ASSURANCE AND ACCOUNTING ASPE - IFRS: A Comparison Foreign Exchange

IFRS 11 Joint Arrangements

real estate and construction The Revenue Proposals Impact on Construction Companies

ASSURANCE AND ACCOUNTING ASPE - IFRS: A Comparison Related Party Transactions

NEED TO KNOW. IFRS 11 Joint Arrangements

IFRS industry insights

IFRS industry insights

Challenges in adopting and applying IFRS 11

A Refresher Course on Current Financial Reporting Standards 2013 (Day 2) Associates and joint arrangements

IFRS Newsletter Special Edition New Consolidations Standards

PSAB AT A GLANCE Section PS Financial Statement Presentation by Not-for-Profit Organizations

ILLUSTRATIVE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS YEAR ENDED 31 DECEMBER 2012 International Financial Reporting Standards

IFRS News Special Edition

IAS Investments in Associates. By:

EN Official Journal of the European Union L 320/161

PSAB AT A GLANCE Section PS 3450 Financial Instruments

IFRS News. Special Edition. New consolidations standards. June 2011

FINANCIAL REPORTING WORKSHOP, MOMBASA Consolidated Financial Statements and Business Combinations -IFRS 10, IFRS 11 IFRS 3 & IPSAS 40 Presentation by:

IAS Investment in Joint Ventures. By:

EXPOSURE DRAFT 2015/11 APPLYING IFRS 9 FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS WITH IFRS 4 INSURANCE CONTRACTS

REVIEW OF THE CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORK IASB DISCUSSION PAPER INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL REPORTING BULLETIN 2013/18

Interests in Joint Ventures

Ind-AS 111 JOINT ARRAGEMENTS

ACCOUNTING STANDARDS FOR PRIVATE ENTERPRISES (ASPE) UPDATE 2014

ASSURANCE AND ACCOUNTING ASPE - IFRS: A Comparison Income Taxes

ASNPO AT A GLANCE. Capital Assets

IFRS 14 REGULATORY DEFERRAL ACCOUNTS INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL REPORTING BULLETIN 2014/01

Package of five standards on consolidation, joint arrangements, associates and disclosures. Candy Fong (7 March 2013)

Adviser alert Example Consolidated Financial Statements 2013

Highlights of Section 1591

ED 9 Joint Arrangements

PSAB AT A GLANCE Contributions

PSAB AT A GLANCE Section PS 3070 Investments in Government Business Enterprises

SAMPLE CREDIT UNION ILLUSTRATIVE IFRS FINANCIAL STATEMENTS. Year ended December 31, 2012

Practical guide to IFRS

ASPE AT A GLANCE. Financial Statement Presentation

Separate Financial Statements

IFRSs, IFRICs AND AMENDMENTS AVAILABLE FOR EARLY ADOPTION FOR 31 DECEMBER 2016 YEAR ENDS

Investments in Associates

The Effects of Changes in Foreign Exchange Rates

Consolidated Financial Statements, Joint Arrangements, and Disclosure of Interests in Other Entities

ILLUSTRATIVE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS YEAR ENDED 31 DECEMBER 2017 INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL REPORTING STANDARDS

IAS 28 Investment in Associates - A Closer Look

Delivering value through transformation. Practical Guide to New Singapore Financial Reporting Standards for 2014

ESMA s REVIEW OF THE APPLICATION OF BUSINESS COMBINATION ACCOUNTING INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL REPORTING BULLETIN 2014/10

IFRS INTERPRETATIONS COMMITTEE - AGENDA DECISIONS (JUNE 2018)

Accounting news. 02 Czech Accounting 05 US GAAP 03 IFRS. We support young talents in the arts. Accounting for Annual Bonuses

Management s Report. Calgary, Alberta February 8, ARC Resources Ltd. 1

EXPOSURE DRAFT DISCLOSURE INITIATIVE (PROPOSED AMENDMENTS TO IAS 1) INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL REPORTING BULLETIN 2014/03

INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL REPORTING STANDARDS

Other Indicators : Where Funds from Financing Activities are generated Receipts of Operating activities are retained

IFRSs, IFRICs AND AMENDMENTS AVAILABLE FOR EARLY ADOPTION FOR 31 DECEMBER 2015 YEAR ENDS

IFRS AT A GLANCE IFRS 11 Joint Arrangements

Adviser alert The Road to IFRS a practical guide to IFRS 1 and first-time adoption (Revised Guide)

ILLUSTRATIVE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS IFRS 9 SUPPLEMENT YEAR ENDED 31 DECEMBER 2017 INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL REPORTING STANDARDS

International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS)

IASB issues three new standards: Consolidated Financial Statements, Joint Arrangements, and Disclosure of Interests in Other Entities

New Standards For Consolidation And Joint Ventures (IFRS 10, IFRS 11, Revised IAS 27 and IAS 28)

IND AS 111. Joint Arrangements

ILLUSTRATIVE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS TIER 2 NOT FOR-PROFIT PUBLIC BENEFIT ENTITY FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 MARCH 2016

EUROPEAN COMMON ENFORCEMENT PRIORITIES FOR 2013 FINANCIAL STATEMENTS INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL REPORTING BULLETIN 2013/22

First-Time Adoption of International Financial Reporting Standards

Implementing IFRS 10 Consolidated Financial Statements

DISCLOSURE INITIATIVE (AMENDMENTS TO IAS 1) INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL REPORTING BULLETIN 2015/02

International Financial Reporting Standard 1 First-time Adoption of International Financial Reporting Standards

IFRS 10, 11 and 12 on consolidation and joint arrangements

IFRS INTERPRETATIONS COMMITTEE - AGENDA DECISIONS (SEPTEMBER 2017)

Investment Corporation of Dubai and its subsidiaries

ACCOUNTING STANDARDS FOR PRIVATE ENTERPRISES (ASPE) UPDATE 2017

Georgian Leasing Company LLC Consolidated financial statements

NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 DECEMBER Corporate information

FINANCIAL REPORTING FOR GROUP ENTITIES UNDER IFRS

ILLUSTRATIVE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS YEAR ENDED 31 DECEMBER 2015 INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL REPORTING STANDARDS

Investments in Associates

Integris Credit Union

IFRS 1 - First-Time Adoption of IFRS

Ernst & Young IFRS Core Tools April IFRS Update. of standards and interpretations in issue at 31 March 2012

International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS)

Ernst & Young IFRS Core Tools. IFRS Update. of standards and interpretations in issue at 28 February 2013

International Accounting Standard 27 Separate Financial Statements. Objective. Scope. Definitions

Wrestling with the First-Time Adoption of IFRS. PwC

Presentation of Financial Statements

Financial Statements. For the six months ended June 30, Manitoba Telecom Services Inc.

First-time Adoption of International Financial Reporting Standards

IFRSs, IFRICs AND AMENDMENTS THAT ARE MANDATORY FOR THE FIRST TIME FOR 31 DECEMBER 2014 YEAR ENDS INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL REPORTING BULLETIN 2014/22

HKFRS and IFRS Update June 2012

HKFRS / IFRS UPDATE 2017/03

HKAS 27 and HKFRS 3 9 January 2009

Sri Lanka Accounting Standard-LKAS 31. Interests in Joint Ventures

TOTAL ASSETS 417,594, ,719,902

Accounting for joint arrangements in the power and utilities sector. Applying IFRS in Power & Utilities. Challenges in applying IFRS 11

CONSOLIDATED INCOME STATEMENT FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 DECEMBER 2017

First-time Adoption of International Financial Reporting Standards

Transcription:

IFRS 11 AND MINING JOINT ARRANGEMENTS

Energy and Natural Resources IFRS 11 and Mining Joint Arrangements In May 2011, the International Accounting Standard Board (IASB) issued IFRS 11 Joint Arrangements 1, which supersedes IAS 31 Interests in Joint Ventures and SIC 13 Jointly Controlled Entities Non-Monetary Contributions by Venturers. The standard is effective for years beginning on or after January 1, 2013. Since it is very common in the mining industry for companies to enter into joint arrangements, IFRS 11 could have a significant impact on all entities in this industry, from early stage exploration companies to large integrated mining companies. The impact of IFRS 11 on mining companies could be significant, as it could change the accounting for the joint arrangements these entities enter into: For companies who have existing joint arrangements, they should review their legal agreements to determine in the context of IFRS 11 if any changes need to be made to legal agreements or accounting for the joint arrangement. For companies who are considering entering into joint arrangements, it is important to understand how some of the key requirements of IFRS 11 will impact how you structure your agreements to ensure it is accounted for properly under the new standard. Overall approach 1 ST ASSESSMENT JOINT CONTROL NO Do all the parties, or a group of the parties, have joint control over the arrangement? Outside the scope of IFRS 11 The Terminology The first change to be aware of is the introduction of the term joint arrangement. A joint arrangement is an arrangement under which two or more parties have joint control. A joint arrangement has the following characteristics: the parties are bound by a contractual arrangement the contractual arrangement gives two or more of those parties joint control of the arrangement IFRS 11 classifies joint arrangements into two types: Joint operation: A joint operation is a joint arrangement whereby the parties that have joint control of the arrangement (i.e. joint operators) have rights to the assets, and obligations for the liabilities, relating to the arrangement Joint venture: A joint venture is a joint arrangement whereby the parties that have joint control of the arrangement (i.e. joint venturers) have rights to the net assets of the arrangement. Under IAS 31 the term joint venture was used to describe all joint arrangements, now it is used to describe a type of joint arrangement In many cases this terminology will often differ from the contractual terms. It will not be uncommon for two mining companies to enter into joint venture agreement to explore a property, which from an IFRS 11 standpoint will be considered a joint operation. YES 2 ND ASSESSMENT Classification of the JOINT ARRANGEMENT Analysis of the parties' rights and obligations arising from the arrangement Joint operation Joint venture 1. The IFRS was published concurrently with four other standards: IFRS 10 Consolidated Financial Statements, IFRS 12 Disclosure of Interests in Other Entities, IAS 28 (as amended in 2011) Investments in Associates and Joint Ventures and IAS 27 (as amended in 2011) Separate Financial Statements.

Energy and Natural Resources IFRS 11 and Mining Joint Arrangements Joint control Joint control is the contractually agreed sharing of control of an arrangement. It exists only when decisions about the relevant activities of the arrangement require the unanimous consent of the parties sharing the control of the arrangement. For this purposes, relevant activities are as defined in IFRS 10 being activities of the arrangement that significantly affect its returns. An arrangement can be a joint arrangement even when not all of its parties have joint control of the arrangement. IFRS 11 distinguishes between parties that have joint control of a joint arrangement (joint operators and joint venturers) and parties that participate in, but do not have joint control of, a joint arrangement (those parties hold a simple investment). Sometimes the decision-making process that is agreed upon by the parties in their contractual arrangement implicitly leads to joint control. For example: Assume two parties establish an arrangement in which each has 50% of the voting rights The contractual arrangement between them specifies that at least 51% of the voting rights are required to make decisions about the relevant activities. In this case, the parties have implicitly agreed that they have joint control of the arrangement because decisions about the relevant activities cannot be made without both parties agreeing. In other circumstances, the contractual arrangement might require a minimum proportion of the voting rights to make decisions. When that minimum required proportion of the voting rights can be achieved by more than one combination of the parties agreeing together, that arrangement is not a joint arrangement unless the contractual arrangement specifies which parties (or combination of parties) are required to agree unanimously to decisions about the relevant activities of the arrangement. Example #1 illustrates this. Illustration 1 - Voting Rights Three parties establish an arrangement in which entities A, B and C have 50, 30 and 20 per cent of the voting rights in the arrangement, respectively. The contractual arrangement specifies that at least 75 per cent of the voting rights are required to make decisions about the relevant activities. Therefore, even though A can block any decision, it does not control the arrangement because it needs the agreement of B. The contractual terms mean that A and B have implicit joint control of the arrangement because decisions about the relevant activities of the arrangement cannot be made without both A and B agreeing. However if the ownership percentages were 50, 25 and 25 joint control does not exist unless the contractual arrangement among the parties specified which combination of them is required to agree about decisions in respect of the relevant activities. Ownership Entity A 50% Entity B 30% Entity C 20% Decisions about relevant activities Is there joint control? Scenario 1 Scenario 2 At least 75% of the voting rights are required YES- implicit joint control Entity A 50% Entity B 25% Entity C 25% At least 75% of the voting rights are required NO- unless contractually agreed Classification of Joint Arrangements as Joint Operations or Joint Ventures The classification of a joint arrangement as a joint operation or a joint venture depends upon the rights and obligations of the parties to the arrangement. When assessing the parties rights and obligations arising from the arrangement, consider the following: the structure of the joint arrangement. when the joint arrangement is structured through a separate vehicle: the legal form of the separate vehicle; the terms of the contractual arrangement; and when relevant, other facts and circumstances.

A joint arrangement is an arrangement under which two or more parties have joint control. Structure of the Joint Arrangement A joint arrangement that is not structured through a separate vehicle is a joint operation. In such cases, the contractual arrangement establishes the parties rights to the assets, and obligations for the liabilities, relating to the arrangement, and the parties rights to the corresponding revenues and obligations for the corresponding expenses. The contractual arrangement often describes the nature of the activities that are the subject of the arrangement and how the parties intend to undertake those activities together. For example, the parties to a joint arrangement could agree to develop a property, with each party being responsible for specific tasks and each using its own assets and incurring its own liabilities. In such a case, each joint operator recognizes in its financial statements the assets and liabilities used for the specific task, and recognizes its share of the revenues and expenses in accordance with the contractual arrangement. In other cases, the parties to a joint arrangement might agree to share and operate a mine. In such a case, the contractual arrangement establishes the parties rights to the well that is operated jointly, and how output or revenue from the asset and operating costs are shared among the parties. Each of the parties accounts for its share of the joint asset and its agreed share of any liabilities, and recognizes its share of the output, revenues and expenses in accordance with the contractual arrangement. Joint Arrangement Structured Through a Separate Vehicle A joint arrangement in which the assets and liabilities relating to the arrangement are held in a separate vehicle can be either a joint venture or a joint operation. The legal form of the separate vehicle can be relevant when assessing the type of joint arrangement. For example, the parties might conduct the joint arrangement through a separate vehicle, whose legal form causes the separate vehicle to be considered in its own right (i.e. the assets and liabilities held in the separate vehicle are the assets and liabilities of the separate vehicle and not the assets and liabilities of each of the parties to the joint arrangement). In such a case, the assessment of the rights and obligations conferred upon the parties by the legal form of the separate vehicle indicates that the arrangement is a joint venture. However, the terms agreed by the parties in their contractual arrangement and, when relevant, other facts and circumstances can override the assessment by the legal form of the separate vehicle and result in it being accounted for as a joint operation. The following is an example of how other factors could influence the classification of joint arrangement structured through a separate vehicle: Illustration 2 - Joint Arrangement Structured Through a Separate Vehicle Assume that two parties structure a joint arrangement in an incorporated entity in which each party has a 50 per cent ownership interest. The purpose of the arrangement is to mine and produce gold concentrate, that each would further refine at their own processing facilities. The entity s legal form initially indicates that the assets and liabilities held in the entity are the assets and liabilities of the entity. The contractual arrangement between the parties does not specify that the parties have rights to the assets or obligations for the liabilities. Accordingly, it appears that the arrangement is a joint venture. However, the parties also consider the following aspects of the arrangement: Under the terms of the arrangement, the parties have agreed to purchase all the concentrate produced by the entity in a ratio of 50:50. The entity cannot sell any of the output to third parties, unless this is approved by the two parties to the arrangement. the price of the output sold to the parties is set by both parties at a level that is designed to cover the costs of production and administrative expenses incurred by the entity. On the basis of this operating model, the arrangement is intended to operate at a break-even level. From the fact pattern above, it can be concluded that: the obligation of the parties to purchase all the output produced by the entity reflects the exclusive dependence of the entity upon the parties for the generation of cash flows and, thus, the parties have an obligation to fund the settlement of the liabilities of the entity. the fact that the parties have rights to all the output produced by the entity means that the parties have rights to all the economic benefits of the assets of the entity. These facts and circumstances indicate that the arrangement is a joint operation.

Energy and Natural Resources IFRS 11 and Mining Joint Arrangements Structure of the joint arrangement Structured through a separate vehicle Legal Form Does the legal form of the separate vehicle give the parties rights to the assets and obligations for the liabilities relating to the arrangement? NO YES Not structured through a separate vehicle Terms of contractual arrangement Do the terms of the contractual arrangement specify that the parties have rights to the assets and obligations for the liabilities relating to the arrangement? NO YES Other facts and circumstances Have the parties designed the arrangement so that: its activities primarily aim to provide the parties with an output, and it depends on the parties on a continuous basis for settling the liabilities relating to the activity conducted through it? NO YES JOINT VENTURE JOINT OPERATION Accounting for Joint Arrangements The classification of your joint arrangement will ultimately impact the accounting. Joint ventures are required to be accounted for using the equity method. For many entities in the mining industry this will be a change, as use of proportionate consolidation is the predominant industry practice under IAS 31. Joint operations shall recognize in relation to its interest in a joint operation its assets, including its share of any assets held jointly; its liabilities, including its share of any liabilities incurred jointly; its revenue from the sale of its share of the output arising from the joint operation; its share of the revenue from the sale of the output by the joint operation; and its expenses, including its share of any expenses incurred jointly. For many entities the accounting for joint operations will resemble proportionate consolidation accounting under IAS 31.

Energy and Natural Resources IFRS 11 and Mining Joint Arrangements The impact of IFRS 11 on mining companies could be significant, as it could change the accounting for the joint arrangements these entities enter into. The Transition Joint ventures transition from proportionate consolidation to the equity method When changing from proportionate consolidation to the equity method, an entity recognizes its investment in the joint venture as at the beginning of the earliest period presented. That initial investment is measured at the aggregate of the carrying amounts of the assets and liabilities that the entity had previously proportionately consolidated, including any goodwill arising from acquisition. If the goodwill previously belonged to a larger cash-generating unit, or to a group of cash-generating units, the goodwill is allocated to the joint venture on the basis of the relative carrying amounts of the joint venture and the cash-generating unit or group of cashgenerating units to which it belonged. The opening aggregated balance of the above investment is regarded as its deemed cost at initial recognition. If aggregating all previously proportionately consolidated assets and liabilities results in a net liability position, an entity assesses whether it has legal or constructive obligations in relation to the net liabilities and, if so, recognizes the corresponding liability. If it is concluded that there are no legal or constructive obligations in relation to the net liabilities the corresponding liability is not recognised, with an adjustment being made to retained earnings at the beginning of the earliest period presented. In such cases, disclosure is required that this approach has been followed, along with a note of the cumulative unrecognised share of losses of joint ventures as at the beginning of the earliest period presented and at the date at which IFRS 11 is first applied. Joint operations transition from the equity method to accounting for assets and liabilities When changing from the equity method to accounting for assets and liabilities in respect of its interest in a joint operation, an entity is required, at the beginning of the earliest period presented, to derecognise the investment that was previously accounted for using the equity method, and any other items that formed part of the entity s net investment in the arrangement and recognise its share of each of the assets and the liabilities in respect of its interest in the joint operation, including any goodwill that might have formed part of the carrying amount of the investment. An entity s interest in the assets and liabilities relating to the joint operation is determined on the basis of its rights and obligations in a specified proportion in accordance with the contractual arrangement. The initial carrying amounts of the assets and liabilities are measured by disaggregating them from the carrying amount of the investment at the beginning of the earliest period presented. Any difference arising from the investment previously accounted for using the equity method together with any other items that formed part of the entity s net investment in the arrangement and the net amount of the assets and liabilities, including any goodwill, recognized is accounted for as follows: offset against any goodwill relating to the investment with any remaining difference adjusted against retained earnings at the beginning of the earliest period presented, if the net amount of the assets and liabilities, including any goodwill, recognised is higher than the investment (and any other items that formed part of the entity s net investment) derecognized. adjusted against retained earnings at the beginning of the earliest period presented, if the net amount of the assets and liabilities, including any goodwill, recognized is lower than the investment (and any other items that formed part of the entity s net investment) derecognized. Plan for the impact of IFRS 11 The impact of IFRS 11 on mining companies could be significant, as it could change the accounting for the joint arrangements these entities enter into. Although the standard is not effective until 2013, the transitional provisions require restatement of the comparative periods, which for entities with calendar year ends means considering all arrangements as of January 1, 2012. We highly recommend beginning the process by reviewing the original agreements of your joint arrangements as soon as possible.

BDO IN CANADA BDO is one of the leading accounting and advisory firms in Canada with over 100 offices from coast to coast. With 90 years of experience serving Canadian businesses, we have the expertise to serve owner-managed, large and mid-market companies, communities and non-profits in a broad range of industries. Our team of partners and professionals offers value-added services to our clients, with a strong focus on business and community relationships. BDO AROUND THE WORLD The international BDO network is comprised of public accounting firms around the world, called BDO Member Firms. We are the fifth largest accounting and advisory network in the world, with a full range of related services tailored to each respective locale. As part of this worldwide network, our Canadian member firm has access to more than 1,000 offices in over 100 countries. www.bdo.ca This publication has been carefully prepared, but it has been written in general terms and should be seen as broad guidance only. The publication cannot be relied upon to cover specific situations and you should not act, or refrain from acting, upon the information contained therein without obtaining specific professional advice. Please contact BDO Canada LLP to discuss these matters in the context of your particular circumstances. BDO Canada LLP, its partners, employees and agents do not accept or assume any liability or duty of care for any loss arising from any action taken or not taken by anyone in reliance on the information in this publication or for any decision based on it. BDO Canada LLP, a Canadian limited liability partnership, is a member of BDO International Limited, a UK company limited by guarantee, and forms part of the international BDO network of independent member firms. BDO is the brand name for the BDO network and for each of the BDO Member Firms.