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International GAAP® 2019: Generally Accepted Accounting Practice under International Financial Reporting Standards

Page 645

by International GAAP 2019 (pdf)


  It is important to note that assessing whether an entity is a principal or an agent will

  require consideration of all factors collectively. See Chapter 6 at 6.1 for more details

  regarding the principal versus agent requirements.

  Where it is determined that a manager is acting as a principal and therefore controls an

  arrangement, the impact of this will depend upon the rights and obligations conveyed

  by the arrangement (see 7.1.2.A and 7.1.2.B below for further discussion on this issue).

  Where it is determined that the manager is acting as an agent, the manager would only

  recognise its own interests in the joint arrangement (the accounting for which will

  depend upon whether it is a joint operation or joint venture) and its

  operator/management fee.

  7.1.2.A

  Implications of controlling a joint operation

  While the principal versus agent assessment may lead to a conclusion that an manager

  has control, if the joint arrangement is a joint operation, and each party has specific

  rights to, and obligations for, the underlying assets and liabilities of the arrangement by

  virtue of the contract, then the manager does not control anything over and above its

  own direct interest in those assets and liabilities. Therefore, it still only recognises its

  interest in those assets and liabilities conveyed to it by the contractual arrangement.

  This accounting applies regardless of whether the arrangement is in a separate vehicle

  or not, as the contractual terms are the primary determinant of the accounting. Note

  that IFRS 11 defines a separate vehicle as ‘a separately identifiable financial structure,

  including separate legal entities or entities recognised by statute, regardless of whether

  those entities have a legal personality’. [IFRS 11 Appendix A]. To explain this further, it is

  worth considering the two types of joint arrangements contemplated by IFRS 11 – one

  that is not structured through a separate vehicle (e.g. a contract alone) and one that is

  structured through a separate vehicle.

  No separate vehicle: Even if the manager ‘controlled’ the arrangement, there is really

  nothing for it to control. This is because each party would continue to account for its

  rights and obligations arising from the contract, e.g. it would apply IAS 16 to account for

  its rights to any tangible assets, IAS 38 to account for its rights to any intangible assets

  or IFRS 9 to account for its obligations for any financial liabilities etc. Additionally, the

  consolidation requirements of IFRS 10 would not apply as they only apply to entities

  and, in most circumstances, a contract does not create an entity.

  Separate vehicle: If a manager controls an arrangement structured through a separate

  vehicle, e.g. a company or trust, one may consider that an entity would automatically

  look to IFRS 10 and consolidate the arrangement and account for the interests of the

  other parties as non-controlling interests. However, in such situations, a contract may

  exist which gives other parties to the arrangement direct rights to, and obligations for,

  the underlying assets and liabilities of that arrangement. Therefore, this requires

  consideration of the impact of such an arrangement on the separate financial statements

  of the joint operation.

  Extractive

  industries

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  Given this, the rights and obligations arising from the contractual arrangement should

  be accounted for first. That is, each party to the arrangement should recognise its

  respective share of the assets and liabilities (applying each IFRS as appropriate, e.g.

  IAS 16, IAS 38, IFRS 9 etc.).

  To the extent that the parties to the arrangement have specific rights to the assets, or

  obligations for the liabilities, from the perspective of the separate vehicle, this means

  that the rights to, and obligations for, its assets and liabilities have been contracted out

  to other parties (i.e. the parties to the contractual arrangement) and therefore there may

  be no assets or liabilities remaining in the separate vehicle to recognise.

  Consequently, from the perspective of the manager of the joint arrangement, who may

  be considered to control the separate vehicle, it would initially account for its and other

  parties’ rights and obligations arising from the contract, and then when it looks to

  consolidate the separate vehicle, there may be nothing left to consolidate, as the

  separate vehicle may effectively be empty. However, this would only apply where the

  separate vehicle was an entity as IFRS 10 only applies to entities.

  The above analysis demonstrates that where parties to an arrangement genuinely have

  contractual rights to, and obligations for, the underlying assets and liabilities of the

  arrangement, concluding that a manager controls the arrangement does not change the

  accounting for either the manager or the non-operator parties. However, the disclosure

  requirements would likely differ, since IFRS 12 does not apply to joint arrangements in

  which a party does not have joint control, unless that party has significant influence.

  The disclosure requirements of IFRS 12 are discussed in Chapter 13.

  7.1.2.B

  Implications of controlling a joint venture

  If a manager has control of a joint venture which was structured through a separate

  vehicle which is considered to be an entity, the manager would have to consolidate the

  separate vehicle and recognise any non-controlling interest(s). However, if the joint

  venture is structured through a separate vehicle that is not an entity, IFRS 10 would not

  apply, and the manager would apply the relevant IFRSs.

  7.1.3

  Parties to a joint arrangement without joint control or control

  The accounting treatment of an interest in a contractual arrangement that does not give

  rise to joint control or control depends on the rights and obligations of the party.

  7.1.3.A Joint

  operations

  In some cases, a mining company or oil and gas company may be involved in a joint

  operation, but it does not have joint control or control of that arrangement. Similar to

  the situation discussed above at 7.1.2.A, effectively, if the joint arrangement is a joint

  operation (i.e. joint control exists between two or more parties), and the party has rights

  to the assets and obligations for the liabilities relating to that joint operation, it does not

  matter whether the party in question has control, joint control or not – the accounting

  is the same as that for a joint operation under IFRS 11, which is discussed in more detail

  in Chapter 12 at 6.4. [IFRS 11.23]. The critical aspect of this accounting is whether there is

  joint control by two or more parties within the arrangement (and therefore it is a joint

  operation in accordance with IFRS 11). However, the disclosure requirements would

  likely differ, since IFRS 12 does not apply to joint arrangements in which a party does

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  not have joint control, unless that party has significant influence. The disclosure

  requirements of IFRS 12 are discussed in Chapter 13.

  If the party does not have rights to the assets and obligations for the liabilities relating

  to the joint operation, it accounts for its interest in the joint operation in accordance

  with other applicable IFRSs. [IFRS 11.23]
. For example, if it:

  (a) has significant influence over a separate vehicle which is an entity – apply IAS 28

  – Investments in Associates and Joint Ventures;

  (b) has significant influence over a separate vehicle which is not an entity – apply

  other applicable IFRSs;

  (c) does not have significant influence over a separate vehicle – account for that

  interest as a financial asset under IFRS 9; or

  (d) has an interest in an arrangement without a separate vehicle – apply other

  applicable IFRSs.

  7.1.3.B Joint

  ventures

  In some cases, a mining company or oil and gas company may be involved in a joint

  venture, but it does not have joint control or control of that arrangement. In this instance

  it would account for its interest as follows:

  (a) significant influence over a separate vehicle which is an entity – still apply IAS 28,

  [IFRS 11.25], however, the disclosure requirements differ for an associate versus a

  joint venture (see Chapter 13 at 5);

  (b) significant influence over a separate vehicle which is not an entity – apply other

  applicable IFRSs; or

  (c) does not have significant influence over a separate vehicle – account for that

  interest as a financial asset under IFRS 9 at fair value through profit or loss or other

  comprehensive income, unless the investment was held for trading.

  See Chapter 44 for further information on IFRS 9. [IFRS 11.25, C14].

  7.1.4

  Managers of joint arrangements

  It is clear that a participant in a joint operation is required to recognise its rights to the

  assets, and its obligations for the liabilities (or share thereof), of the joint arrangement.

  Therefore it is important that an entity fully understands what these rights and

  obligations are and how these may differ between the parties.

  See 7.1.2 above for a discussion of the principal versus agent assessment that needs to

  be considered when an entity is appointed as manager of a joint arrangement and what

  impact that assessment might have on the manager’s accounting.

  7.1.4.A

  Reimbursements of costs

  A manager often carries out activities on behalf of the joint arrangement on a no gain, no loss

  basis. Generally, these activities can be identified separately and are carried out by the

  manager in its capacity as an agent for the joint arrangement, which is effectively the principal

  in those transactions. The manager receives reimbursement of direct costs recharged to the

  joint arrangement. Such recharges are reimbursements of costs that the manager incurred as

  an agent for the joint arrangement and therefore have no effect on profit or loss in the

  statement of comprehensive income (or income statement) of the manager.

  Extractive

  industries

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  In many cases, a manager also incurs certain general overhead expenses in carrying out

  activities on behalf of the joint arrangement. As these costs can often not be specifically

  identified, many joint operating agreements allow the manager to recover the general

  overhead expenses incurred by charging an overhead fee that is based on a fixed

  percentage of the total costs incurred for the year. Although the purpose of this recharge

  is very similar to the reimbursement of direct costs, the manager is not acting as an agent

  in this case. Therefore, the manager should recognise the general overhead expenses

  and the overhead fee in profit or loss in its statement of comprehensive income (or

  income statement) as an expense and income, respectively.

  7.1.4.B

  Direct legal liability for costs incurred and contracts entered into

  The manager of a joint arrangement may have a direct legal liability to third party

  creditors in respect of the entire balance arising from transactions related to the joint

  arrangement, e.g. suppliers, lessors etc.102 IFRS prohibits the offsetting of such liabilities

  against the amounts recoverable from the other joint arrangement participants.

  [IAS 1.32, IAS 32.42]. The manager may therefore need to recognise and/or disclose, for

  example, some of the leases or supply arrangements that it has entered into on behalf

  of the joint arrangement, as if it entered into these in its own name.

  7.1.4.C

  Joint and several liability

  It is also possible that there may be liabilities in the arrangement where the obligation

  is joint and several. That is, an entity is not only responsible for its proportionate share,

  but it is also liable for the other party’s or parties’ share(s) should it/they be unable or

  unwilling to pay. A common example of this in the extractives industries is restoration,

  rehabilitation and decommissioning obligations.

  In these instances, each party not only takes up its proportionate share of the

  decommissioning/restoration obligation, it is also required to assess the likelihood that

  the other party/ies will not be able or willing to meet their share. The facts and

  circumstances would need to be assessed in each case, and any additional liability and

  disclosures would be accounted for, and disclosed, in accordance with IAS 37.

  Any increase in the provision would be accounted for under IFRIC 1, if it related to a

  restoration or decommissioning liability that had both been included as part of an asset

  measured in accordance with IAS 16 and measured as a liability in accordance with

  IAS 37 (see Chapter 27 at 6.3.1 and 6.3.2 for more details). Such an addition to the asset

  would also require an entity to consider whether this is an indication of impairment of

  the asset as a whole, and if so, would need to test for impairment in accordance with

  IAS 36. Increases that do not meet the requirements of IFRIC 1 would be recognised in

  profit or loss.

  7.1.5

  Non-operators of joint arrangements

  For expenses and liabilities incurred by the manager directly in its own name which it

  recharges to the non-operators, the non-operator entities would be required to

  recognise an amount payable to the operator for such amounts. These would be

  recognised as a financial instrument under IAS 32 and IFRS 9 or potentially a provision

  under IAS 37 and not under the standard which relates to the type of cost being

  reimbursed. For example, the non-operator’s share of employee entitlements relating

  3264 Chapter 39

  to the manager’s employees who work on the joint project would not be recognised as

  an employee benefit under IAS 19 – Employee Benefits. In addition, the related

  disclosure requirements of IAS 19 would not apply, instead the disclosure requirements

  of other standards, e.g. IFRS 7 – Financial Instruments: Disclosures – would apply.

  Expenses and liabilities incurred by the manager jointly on behalf of all of the parties to

  the arrangement would have to be recognised directly by each of the non-operator

  parties in proportion to their respective interests in the arrangement.

  7.2 Undivided

  interests

  Undivided interests are usually subject to joint control (see Chapter 12 at 4.4.1) and can,

  therefore, be accounted for as joint operations. However, some JOAs do not establish

  joint control but are, instead, based on some form of supermajority voting whereby a

  qualified majority (
e.g. 75%) of the participants can approve decisions. This situation

  usually arises when the group of participants is too large for joint control to be practical

  or when the main investor wants to retain a certain level of influence.

  Where joint control does not exist, such undivided interests cannot be accounted for as

  joint operations in the scope of IFRS 11. Instead, the appropriate accounting treatment

  by the investor depends on the nature of the arrangement:

  • if the investor has rights to the underlying asset then the arrangement should be

  accounted for as a tangible or intangible asset under IAS 16 or IAS 38, respectively.

  The investor’s proportionate share of the operating costs of the asset (e.g. repairs

  and maintenance) should be accounted for in the same way as the operating costs

  of wholly owned assets; or

  • if the investor is entitled only to a proportion of the cash flows generated by the

  asset then its investment will generally meet the definition of a financial asset under

  IAS 32. As the investor is exposed to risks other than just credit risk, such

  investments are unlikely be considered debt instruments and instead would be

  considered equity investments under IFRS 9. Under IFRS 9, equity instruments are

  normally measured at fair value through profit or loss. [IFRS 9.4.1.4]. However, on

  initial recognition, an entity may make an irrevocable election (on an instrument-

  by-instrument basis) to present in other comprehensive income subsequent

  changes in the fair value of an investment in an equity instrument within the scope

  of IFRS 9. See Chapter 44 at 2 for a detailed analysis of the impact of IFRS 9 on

  the classification of this investment.

  With respect to such undivided interests, entities also enter into arrangements in which

  they buy and sell parts of undivided assets, e.g. carried interests (see 6.1 above) and

  farm-in arrangements outside the E&E phase (see 6.2.2 and 6.2.3 above). Although

  neither IAS 16 nor IAS 38 addresses part-disposals of undivided assets, it is industry

  practice to apply the principles in those standards when the vendor disposes of these

  interests in circumstances in which it can demonstrate that it neither controls nor jointly

  controls the whole of the original asset. In these circumstances, the principles of IAS 16

  and IAS 38 are applied and the entity derecognises part of the asset, having calculated

 

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