By Yuliya Chernova

Solar-energy technology company BrightSource Energy Inc. had a year to raise money in a new equity round and repay its lenders, but it has delayed repayment several times as it shifts its business focus, VentureWire has learned.

The Oakland, Calif.-based company, now 10 years old and backed by more than $615 million in equity funding, has supplied the technology and is part-owner of the world's largest solar thermal power plant, Ivanpah Solar Electric Generating System, which is located in the Mojave Desert and whose other owners are NRG Energy Inc. (NRG) and Google Inc. (GOOG) The project is funded in part by $1.6 billion in federal loans.

Between July and October of last year, BrightSource brought in $35 million in a credit facility from existing investors, according to Securities and Exchange Commission documents filed by one of BrightSource's investors, BDCA Venture Inc. (BDCV), formerly called Keating Capital.

The credit facility obligated the company to either raise at least $30 million in new equity financing or pay the creditors principal and accrued interest by July 10, 2014, a BDCA Venture document said. Upon a closing of a new equity round, the note holders would be able to convert their notes into preferred shares, the deal stipulated.

On July 10, the note holders amended the agreement to extend the maturity date to Aug. 10, according to the document.

That deadline passed. The debt now matures on Feb. 15, 2015, according to the most recent filing made by BDCA.

"The company has continued to work with its shareholders and third parties in adjusting its capital structure to meet its financing needs," said Joe Desmond, BrightSource's senior vice president of marketing and government affairs, in a statement to VentureWire. Mr. Desmond declined to comment further on BrightSource's financing situation.

The shifting repayment schedule comes amid an overall shift away from major solar-power development projects by the company.

BrightSource at first envisioned being a major developer of solar-power plants in the U.S., and filed documents to go public in October 2011 with that in mind. It said at the time it had contracts to sell electricity in the U.S. that "represent one of the largest utility-scale solar pipelines in the United States and should provide us with a significant revenue opportunity between 2012 and 2016."

But the market for solar thermal technology in the U.S., and BrightSource's plans along with it, changed. In April 2012, it pulled its initial public offering application and began shifting its business plan. Ivanpah is the only full-scale power plant using BrightSource's technology that is operational today out of that pipeline.

The company has taken "much more of a global focus on [concentrated solar power] technology," Mr. Desmond said. "Secondly, there's a transition to much more of a technology provider, as opposed to doing project development."

This shift has taken two years and has affected BrightSource's timeline for additional fundraising, one investor in the company said.

Delays also have hit the company's major project. Ivanpah has pushed off the repayment on its federal loans from several months to a year, as VentureWire reported previously.

BrightSource has raised more than $615 million in equity since being founded in 2004, from investors including VantagePoint Capital Partners as well as Alstom Group, BP Ventures, California State Teachers' Retirement System, Chevron Technology Ventures, DBL Investors, Draper Fisher Jurvetson, Google.org and Morgan Stanley (MS).

Some of BrightSource's shareholders have written down their investments in the company. As of June 30, BDCA Venture wrote down its $3.1 million investment by 48%, saying its value was $1.6 million, according to SEC documents. At the end of September, BDCA wrote down its holding even further, saying it was worth less than $1.5 million.

Alstom took a 23 million euro ($28.6 million) impairment on its EUR106 million investment in BrightSource, as of March 31, it said in its annual financial report. The report said it counted the fair value of its investment in BrightSource at EUR83 million. Alstom has a 21% ownership of BrightSource on a fully diluted basis, according to the report.

Alstom is now divesting its holdings in BrightSource as part of Alstom's sale of some of its assets to General Electric Co. (GE)

"BrightSource is part of the Energy businesses and, as such, included in the transaction with GE," an Alstom spokeswoman wrote in an email to VentureWire.

Even as BrightSource sorts through its financing options, the company has made progress with its new business plan.

Earlier this month BrightSource sold its interest for an undisclosed sum in Palen Solar Energy Generating Station, a California power plant it has been developing, as it increasingly looks for opportunities abroad.

The company has made progress internationally. This week it announced a joint venture with Shanghai Electric Group Co. (600021.SH, 2727.HK), to build large solar thermal power plants in China. In July, one of BrightSource's projects in Israel, in which it is part-owner, received project financing from the European Investment Bank and Bank Hapoalim (POLI.TV).

Write to Yuliya Chernova at yuliya.chernova@wsj.com

Subscribe to WSJ: http://online.wsj.com?mod=djnwires

GE Aerospace (NYSE:GE)
Historical Stock Chart
From Mar 2024 to Apr 2024 Click Here for more GE Aerospace Charts.
GE Aerospace (NYSE:GE)
Historical Stock Chart
From Apr 2023 to Apr 2024 Click Here for more GE Aerospace Charts.