IFRIC 5 Rights to Interests arising from Decommissioning, Restoration and Environmental Rehabilitation Funds
Table of Contents
Rights to Interests arising from
Decommissioning, Restoration and
Environmental Rehabilitation Funds
In December 2004 the International Accounting Standards Board issued IFRIC 5 Rights to
Interests arising from Decommissioning, Restoration and Environmental Rehabilitation Funds. It was
developed by the Interpretations Committee.
Other Standards have made minor consequential amendments to IFRIC 5. They include
IFRS 10 Consolidated Financial Statements (issued May 2011), IFRS 11 Joint Arrangements
(issued May 2011), IFRS 9 Financial Instruments (Hedge Accounting and amendments to
IFRS 9, IFRS 7 and IAS 39) (issued November 2013), IFRS 9 Financial Instruments (issued July
2014) and Amendments to References to the Conceptual Framework in IFRS Standards (issued
March 2018).
IFRIC Interpretation 5 Rights to Interests arising from Decommissioning, Restoration and
Environmental Rehabilitation Funds (IFRIC 5) is set out in paragraphs 1–15 and
the Appendix. IFRIC 5 is accompanied by a Basis for Conclusions. The scope and
authority of Interpretations are set out in the Preface to IFRS Standards.
IFRIC Interpretation 5
Rights to Interests arising from Decommissioning,
Restoration and Environmental Rehabilitation Funds
References
• IFRS 9 Financial Instruments
• IFRS 10 Consolidated Financial Statements
• IFRS 11 Joint Arrangements
• IAS 8 Accounting Policies, Changes in Accounting Estimates and Errors
• IAS 28 Investments in Associates and Joint Ventures
• IAS 37 Provisions, Contingent Liabilities and Contingent Assets
Background
The purpose of decommissioning, restoration and environmental
rehabilitation funds, hereafter referred to as ‘decommissioning funds’ or
‘funds’, is to segregate assets to fund some or all of the costs of
decommissioning plant (such as a nuclear plant) or certain equipment (such as
cars), or in undertaking environmental rehabilitation (such as rectifying
pollution of water or restoring mined land), together referred to as
‘decommissioning’.
Contributions to these funds may be voluntary or required by regulation or
law. The funds may have one of the following structures:
(a) funds that are established by a single contributor to fund its own
decommissioning obligations, whether for a particular site, or for a
number of geographically dispersed sites.
(b) funds that are established with multiple contributors to fund their
individual or joint decommissioning obligations, when contributors
are entitled to reimbursement for decommissioning expenses to the
extent of their contributions plus any actual earnings on those
contributions less their share of the costs of administering the fund.
Contributors may have an obligation to make additional contributions,
for example, in the event of the bankruptcy of another contributor.
(c) funds that are established with multiple contributors to fund their
individual or joint decommissioning obligations when the required
level of contributions is based on the current activity of a contributor
and the benefit obtained by that contributor is based on its past
activity. In such cases there is a potential mismatch in the amount of
contributions made by a contributor (based on current activity) and the
value realizable from the fund (based on past activity).
Such funds generally have the following features:
(a) the fund is separately administered by independent trustees.
(b) entities (contributors) make contributions to the fund, which are
invested in a range of assets that may include both debt and equity
investments, and are available to help pay the contributors’
decommissioning costs. The trustees determine how contributions are
invested, within the constraints set by the fund’s governing documents
and any applicable legislation or other regulations.
(c) the contributors retain the obligation to pay decommissioning costs.
However, contributors are able to obtain reimbursement of
decommissioning costs from the fund up to the lower of the
decommissioning costs incurred and the contributor’s share of assets
of the fund.
(d) the contributors may have restricted access or no access to any surplus
of assets of the fund over those used to meet eligible decommissioning
costs.
Scope
This Interpretation applies to accounting in the financial statements of a
contributor for interests arising from decommissioning funds that have both
of the following features:
(a) the assets are administered separately (either by being held in a
separate legal entity or as segregated assets within another entity); and
(b) a contributor’s right to access the assets is restricted.
A residual interest in a fund that extends beyond a right to reimbursement,
such as a contractual right to distributions once all the decommissioning has
been completed or on winding up the fund, may be an equity instrument
within the scope of IFRS 9 and is not within the scope of this Interpretation.
Issues
The issues addressed in this Interpretation are:
(a) how should a contributor account for its interest in a fund?
(b) when a contributor has an obligation to make additional contributions,
for example, in the event of the bankruptcy of another contributor,
how should that obligation be accounted for?
Consensus
Accounting for an interest in a fund
The contributor shall recognize its obligation to pay decommissioning costs as
a liability and recognize its interest in the fund separately unless the
contributor is not liable to pay decommissioning costs even if the fund fails to
pay.
The contributor shall determine whether it has control or joint control of, or
significant influence over, the fund by reference to IFRS 10, IFRS 11 and
IAS 28. If it does, the contributor shall account for its interest in the fund in
accordance with those Standards.
If a contributor does not have control or joint control of, or significant
influence over, the fund, the contributor shall recognize the right to receive
reimbursement from the fund as a reimbursement in accordance with IAS 37.
This reimbursement shall be measured at the lower of:
(a) the amount of the decommissioning obligation recognized; and
(b) the contributor’s share of the fair value of the net assets of the fund
attributable to contributors.
Changes in the carrying value of the right to receive reimbursement other
than contributions to and payments from the fund shall be recognized in
profit or loss in the period in which these changes occur.
Accounting for obligations to make additional
contributions
When a contributor has an obligation to make potential additional
contributions, for example, in the event of the bankruptcy of another
contributor or if the value of the investment assets held by the fund decreases
to an extent that they are insufficient to fulfil the fund’s reimbursement
obligations, this obligation is a contingent liability that is within the scope
of IAS 37. The contributor shall recognize a liability only if it is probable that
additional contributions will be made.
Disclosure
A contributor shall disclose the nature of its interest in a fund and any
restrictions on access to the assets in the fund.
When a contributor has an obligation to make potential additional
contributions that is not recognized as a liability (see paragraph 10), it shall
make the disclosures required by paragraph 86 of IAS 37.
When a contributor accounts for its interest in the fund in accordance with
paragraph 9, it shall make the disclosures required by paragraph 85(c) of
IAS 37.
Effective date
An entity shall apply this Interpretation for annual periods beginning on or
after 1 January 2006. Earlier application is encouraged. If an entity applies this
Interpretation to a period beginning before 1 January 2006, it shall disclose
that fact.
[Deleted]
IFRS 10 and IFRS 11, issued in May 2011, amended paragraphs 8 and 9. An
entity shall apply those amendments when it applies IFRS 10 and IFRS 11.
[Deleted]
IFRS 9, as issued in July 2014, amended paragraph 5 and deleted
paragraphs 14A and 14C. An entity shall apply those amendments when it
applies IFRS 9.
Transition
Changes in accounting policies shall be accounted for in accordance with the
requirements of IAS 8.
Appendix
Amendment to IAS 39 Financial Instruments: Recognition
and Measurement
The amendment in this appendix shall be applied for annual periods beginning on or after 1 January
2006. If an entity applies this Interpretation for an earlier period, the amendment shall be applied for
that earlier period.
* * * * *
The amendment contained in this appendix when this Interpretation was issued in 2004 was
incorporated into IAS 39 as issued on and after 16 December 2004.