In re Abeinsa Holding, Inc.

562 B.R. 265, 2016 Bankr. LEXIS 4334
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Delaware
DecidedDecember 14, 2016
DocketCase No. 16-10790
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 562 B.R. 265 (In re Abeinsa Holding, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Abeinsa Holding, Inc., 562 B.R. 265, 2016 Bankr. LEXIS 4334 (Del. 2016).

Opinion

OPINION ON CONFIRMATION OF THE DEBTORS’ MODIFIED FIRST AMENDED PLANS OF REORGANIZATION AND LIQUIDATION

KEVIN J. CAREY, UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT

Before me for consideration is confirmation of the Debtors’ Modified First Amend[269]*269ed Plans of Reorganization and Liquidation (the “Plan”), a critical component to the global reorganization of Abengoa, S.A. (“Abengoa” or “Parent”).2 The debtors have resolved virtually all objections to confirmation of the Plan. Only two remain: the United States Trustee’s objection concerns the breadth of the “debtor releases” and the “third-party releases;” the other is by Portland General Electric Company (“PGE”), an Oregon public utility, who has raised almost every conceivable classic confirmation objection to the Plan.3

For the reasons that follow, the Plan will be confirmed.

Background

Abeinsa Holding, Inc. and certain affiliated debtors filed voluntary chapter 11 petitions on March 29, 2016. Additional affiliated entities filed chapter 11 petitions on April 6, April 7 and June 12, 2016. The chapter 11 cases are jointly administered for procedural purposes.

On April 13, 2016, the Office of the United States Trustee formed the Official Committee of Unsecured Creditors (the “Creditors’ Committee”).

Abengoa, S.A.

The Debtors are ultimately owned by Abengoa, S.A., which is “a Spanish company founded in 1941 [that is] a leading engineering and clean technology company, which together with its consolidated subsidiaries, has operations in more than 60 countries.”4 As of the end of 2015, Abengoa was the parent company of approximately 700 other companies around the world, including 577 subsidiaries, 78 associates, 31 joint ventures, and 211 Spanish partnerships, employing 35,000 people (collectively, the “Abengoa Group”).5

With investments of $3.3 billion, the United States has become one of Aben-goa’s largest markets in terms of sales volume, particularly from developing solar, bioethanol and water projects.6 The Debtors’ business operations can be categorized into (i) bioenergy projects; (ii) engineering, procurement and construction companies; and (iii) a solar company.7

The Spanish Proceeding

Abengoa and certain affiliates (the “5 bis Companies”) filed notices with the Mercantile Court of Seville, Spain (the “Spanish Court”) that they had commenced negotiations with their principal creditors to reach a global settlement on the refinancing and restructuring of their liabilities to achieve the viability of the Abengoa Group in the short and long term.8 The Spanish Court issued orders admitting the notices and granting the Article 5 bis Companies protection under the Spanish Insolvency Law.9

Abengoa negotiated with creditors to restructure the financial indebtedness and recapitalize the Abengoa Group (the “Restructuring Proposal”). To provide the Abengoa Group with sufficient time to solicit and obtain the requisite supermajority votes with respect to the Restructuring Proposal, several Abengoa Group companies asked financial creditors to adhere to a standstill agreement, under which the [270]*270financial creditors agreed to stay certain rights and actions vis-á-vis the relevant Abengoa Group companies during a period of several months.10 When the standstill agreement was signed by at least 60% of the Company’s various financial creditors, the Abengoa Group applied for judicial approval (or homologation) of the standstill agreement pursuant to the Spanish Insolvency Law, so that the standstill agreement would become binding upon all relevant financial creditors of the 5 bis Companies.11 On April 6, 2016, the Spanish Court issued the Homologation Order.

Due to the passage of time, a new ho-mologation request was made and the process taking place in Spain was, essentially, restarted. On September 24, 2016, Aben-goa and certain, subsidiaries entered into a Master Restructuring Agreement (the “MRA”) with certain creditors in Spain.12 The MRA provides that certain “Go Forward Companies” will be reorganized, including the “Go Forward Chapter 11 Companies.” 13 The MRA also provides that the Non-Go Forward Chapter 11 Companies will be liquidated under chapter 11 plans of liquidation.14 Various creditors have challenged the Homologation Order, which Spanish Court will consider and then determine whether the Abengoa Group should proceed with the restructuring.15

The Chapter 15 Cases

On March 28, 2016, Abengoa and twenty-four affiliated Spanish companies filed chapter 15 petitions in this Court. On April 27, 2016, I entered an order recognizing the Spanish Proceeding as a foreign main proceeding.16 On December 8, 2016, I entered an Order recognizing the Spanish Court’s Homologation Order.17

The Debtors’ Chapter 11 Plans and Disclosure Statement

On September 26, 2016, the Debtors filed a Disclosure Statement and the Debtors’ Plans of Reorganization and Liquidation. On September 29, 2016, the Debtors filed the Motion for Entry of an Order (A) Approving the Disclosure Statement, (B) Establishing Procedures for the Solicitation and Tabulation of Votes to Accept or Reject the Plan, (C) Approving the Forms of Ballot and Solicitation Materials, (D) Establishing Voting Record Date, (E) Scheduling Confirmation Hearing and Setting the Deadline for Filing Objection to Confirmation of the Plan, and (F) Approving the Related Forms of Notice (the “Disclosure Statement Motion”).

Various creditors and the United States Trustee filed numerous objections to the Disclosure Statement Motion. After negotiations, a series of hearings (some held in Court and some held telephonically), and revisions to the documents, the Debtors presented the Court with revised documents and a consensual Order approving the Disclosure Statement Motion. I entered that Order on October 31, 2016 (D.I. 746). Thereafter, the Debtors sent the solicitation packages to Holders of Claims.18

More than twenty parties filed objections and informal comments to the Debtors’ Plan. The votes were received and tallied and, prior (some just prior) to the [271]*271hearing on confirmation, the Debtors resolved most of the objections to the Plan, so that only the PGE and the U.S. Trustee objections remained. The confirmation hearing was held on December 6, 2016. At the hearing, the Debtor submitted into evidence five of six declarations in support of plan confirmation: 19

(1) Declaration of Christina Pullo of Prime Clerk LLC Regarding the Solicitation of Votes and Tabulation of Ballots Cast on Debtor’s Modified First Amended Plans of Reorganization and Liquidation (D.I. 944);
(2) Declaration of Sebastian Felicetti in Support of Confirmation of the Debtors’ Modified First Amended Plans of Reorganization and Liquidation (D.I. 957);
(3) Declaration of Jeffrey Bland in Support of Confirmation of the Debtors’ Modified First Amended Plans of Reorganization and Liquidation (D.I. 967);

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
562 B.R. 265, 2016 Bankr. LEXIS 4334, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-abeinsa-holding-inc-deb-2016.