Aquila, Inc.

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Aquila, Inc.
Type Public
Genre Energy Company
Founded 1902
Founder Lemuel K. Green
Headquarters Kansas City, Missouri, United States
Key people Richard C. Green (Chairman, President, CEO)
Revenue USD $ 1,369 Million (2006)[1]
Operating income USD -$190.1 Million (2006)[2]
Net income USD $ 23.9 Million (2006)[3]
Total assets USD $874.0 Million (2006)[4]
Total equity USD $1,306.1 Million (2006)[5]
Website aquila.com

Aquila, Inc. (NYSEILA), is an electricity and natural gas distribution network headquartered in Kansas City, Missouri in the United States. The company also owns and operates power generation assets. It previously operated under the name UtiliCorp United, Inc.

The company at one time ranked #33 on the Fortune 500 list before experiencing a dramatic drop in the wake of the Enron collapse.

On February 6, 2007, the company announced plans for a merger valued at $1.7 billion to become a wholly owned subsidiary of Great Plains Energy. In conjunction with the merger Black Hills Corporation is to acquire its Colorado electric utility and the Colorado, Iowa, Kansas and Nebraska gas utilities for $940 million. The merger/purchase has not been completed and is hitting regulatory hurdles.

Contents

[edit] History

[edit] Solomon Valley Milling Company

Aquila has its roots in the Solomon Valley Milling Company founded in 1902 by Lemuel K. Green in Osborne, Kansas. The steam mill used to process flour and Green discovered he could sell electricity.

In 1908 sold the mill and bought the H.M. Spalding Electric Light Plant in Concordia, Kansas. Prior to Green's purchase the plant generated power only dawn to midnight and was closed on Sundays. Green bought power from another flour mill and began selling power to neighboring towns.

[edit] Green Power & Light Company

In 1916 he sold the plant to the A.E. Fitkin & Company in New York City for $550,000. He then bought the Reeder Light, Ice & Fuel Company in Pleasant Hill, Missouri and renamed the company Green Power & Light Company.

He then built Baldwin Lake which was used for hydroelectric power as well as provide water for the community.

[edit] West Missouri Power Company

In 1922 looking to expand with a generating plant at Clinton, Missouri he took the company public under the name West Missouri Power Company. Its chief rival in the Kansas City metropolitan area was Kansas City Power & Light.

The company continued to expand through southwest Missouri.

[edit] Missouri Public Service Company

In 1926 he sold it to the Fitkin Group again which merged with the Missouri Public Service Company. Green retired to Escondido, California where bought a 2,000 acre orange grove. He died in 1930.

The Public Utilities Act of 1935 broke up utilities. Green's son Ralph Green bought controlling interest in Missouri Public Service. Green was bring in Middle West Corporation, Missouri Gas & Electric Service Company and City Light and Traction Company of Sedalia, Missouri.

[edit] UtiliCorp United Inc.

Ralph Green died in 1962 and his son Richard Green took the helm. Richard Green, Jr. took over in 1982. The latest Green looked to expand it beyond its Missouri base and it was renamed UtiliCorp United Inc. in 1985.

It bought People's Natural Gas, Northern Minnesota Utilities, West Virginia Power, West Kootenay Power and Light in British Columbia, Michigan Gas Utilities.

In 1989 it assigned its unregulated gas operations to a newly created subsidiary, Aquila Energy Corp.

The acquisitions were done by issuing stock and reducing Green family control.

In 1992 the company entered into a joint venture to distribute and market natural gas in the United Kingdom. From 1995 to 2000 it bought interest in utilities in New Zealand and Australia.

In some markets Utilicorp placed electric and phone bills on the same bill.

[edit] Aquila, Inc.

In 2001 Utilicorp spun off Aquila but then bought it back in 2002 and then renamed the entire corporation Aquila, Inc.

Aquila's stock price peaked at $37.55 in May 2001 and it ranked #33 on the Fortune 500. The stock plummeted to $6.75 in July 2002 in the wake of the Enron scandal which had called into question business practices of all electric utilities[6]

The company began selling its assets and dropped to 891 on the Fortune list in 2007.[7]

In 2007 its electric assets (in northwest Missouri) were scheduled to be acquired by its historic rival Kansas City Power & Light (via its new parent Great Plains Energy) for $1.7 billion. The sell is hitting some regulatory hurdles.[8]

66,000 of the company's customers in Missouri lost power for several days in the Mid-December 2007 North American Winter storms

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[edit] External links

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