As the marketplace enters unchartered territory for corporate governance in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, an increase in business restructurings and insolvency (R&I) proceedings are becoming commonplace for those companies struggling to recover from the pandemic’s devastating effects.
By Paula-Ann Novotny, an Associate at Webber Wentzel Many companies may need to restructure their business to survive or recover from the negative impacts of the national lockdown. Where initial restructuring activities – such as reducing business overheads, retrenching employees or renegotiating contracts – have the result that the management response may increase environmental risks on site, environmental compliance and risk on site must continue to be managed to avoid costly enforcement action and significant liability. Companies are reminded to act proactively in accordance with the statutory duties of care, as well as all regulatory and licensing requirements, to the extent possible within the ambit of the COVID-19 response measures. For example, monitoring and reporting functions / schedules stipulated in licence conditions or legislation continue to be prescriptive, while other administrative processes governed by statute have been delayed by the various COVID-19 restrictions. Specific legal advice may be required to confirm the scope and extent of statutory obligations which continue to require environmental compliance, despite reduced or changed operational circumstances. If not successfully restructured, many operations may face solvency issues and be placed under business rescue or, if this is unsuccessful, will ultimately be subject to winding up or liquidation. The business rescue and insolvency scenarios require a host of considerations to be taken into account from a regulatory perspective where environmental impacts and consequences may surface. The appointment of a Business Rescue Practitioner (BRP) to manage the affairs, business, and property of the company in business rescue brings with it the following tasks which should be flagged by the company and the BRP:- In undertaking an assessment of the company asset(s) under business rescue, do any operations need to manage environmental impacts and has a due diligence been conducted into their state of compliance?
- In assessing the contractual obligations of the company to determine which ones must be suspended, has the BRP considered the consequences of terminating service level agreements whose objective is to manage, in some way, the environmental duties of the company?
- In addition to the business rescue plan, will the BRP be required to consider, draft and implement business continuity, management and/or interim care and maintenance plans (for those operations requiring continuous processes, to avoid damage to their continuous operations and to ensure that the site remains in a safe and stable condition)? If yes, have the environmental obligations and statutory requirements which must be included in each of these been assessed?
- If the business will be liquidated / wound up and the operation or its assets sold, have the BRP and management team considered and assessed the statutory / regulatory requirements informing: (i) the transfer of liabilities to the potential purchaser; and (ii) transferability restrictions in permits held by the operation and/or statutes? In addition, has legal counsel signed off on those clauses in the Sale and Purchase Agreement (or Sale of Business Agreement) relating to the transfer of rehabilitation and environmental obligations to the potential purchaser?