HowardWidra
Analyst · Wells Fargo Securities
Well, I don't think that's. So there's two things that that the restructuring did to make us, you know, more stable. It's what basically, the equity owner of the facility basically, what was running this project, both to produce profit as well as to build off a IP value off sort of a carbon free technology. Our restructure, basically, you know, changed our deal to sort of align us directly with that equity investor. So, we both had debt on our operating company of you will and we had ownership in the IP, that is monetizable in other places we believe and has raise money at a good valuation. And so what we have done in terms of sort of the stability, so one we diversified our collateral, if you will. So we basically the position now has both the previous collateral had before, which is this plant, and it also has this IP, which is separately, had separate value, that's one and two, because of that, and because of allocating a portion of the value to that equity, the debt that the operating companies forced to carry is now much lower. So, the cash flow profile of that entity is it's easy for it to service its debt. You know, it still driven by a commodity price. So it can still have some variability on its ability, but it now has less debt. So it has a much lower burden of debt. You know, also no pick [ph]. You know, want to grow anymore. So it will have something like $33 million a debt that will pace that it can cover, which is far less than have a cover before. And then we have a separate pool of value. And so we view it as meaningfully direct from where it was before. Obviously, we wrote some down as well. So there's less debt, there's less debt to service and as more collateral.