(Adds parties working toward out-of-court restructuring for months; comment from Longview CEO; background)

 
   By Patrick Fitzgerald and Emily Glazer 
 

First Reserve Corp.'s Longview Power, LLC, a 700 megawatt coal-fired power project in West Virginia, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in Delaware Friday morning as it faced an upcoming interest payment and battled low natural gas and coal prices.

Also filing for Chapter 11 protection in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Wilmington, Del., was Longview's West Virginia coal-mining partner Mepco Holdings LLC and 11 other affiliates.

First Reserve, a $23 billion energy-focused private equity firm based in Greenwich, Conn., pumped about $1 billion in equity into the $2 billion project, according to court filings. Longview Power owes lenders, led by Citigroup (C), about $1.2 billion, including $557 million of debt that matures in February 2014.

The bankruptcy filing was prompted by the interest payment due to lenders on Friday. Failure to pay would have caused a default under the company's credit pact, said Jeffery Keffer, chief executive of Longview Power, in court papers.

"The company has been in consensual negotiations with our senior lenders toward a Chapter 11 plan to maximize value; those negotiations remain ongoing," Mr. Keffer said in a statement. "We remain confident that the company and our lenders will reach an agreement on the terms of a Chapter 11 plan in the near term."

Legal and financial advisers had been working on an out-of-court restructuring with lenders for months, but it was a slow path because creditors were diverse and widely held, including power holders and European banks, a person familiar with the matter said. There was also a lot of trading during the attempted restructuring because creditors didn't want to take writedowns, this person said.

Longview, based in Maidsville, W. Va., began operations in December 2011. The company generated about $255 million in revenue for the 12-month period ending in June, with some $106 million coming from the sale of power.

But the plant has been plagued by problems, including forced and extended planned outages owing to problems arising from its design and construction, , Mr. Keffer said. Those alleged flaws have resulted in the plant operating at 68% of capacity.

Mepco brought in $149 million over the same 12-month period. It operates three active underground coal mines and one active surface mine located in northern West Virginia and southwestern Pennsylvania. About half its yearly coal production is sold to Longview.

Longview and Mepco will keep their doors opens and continue to conduct business during their bankruptcy case. To that end, the company is seeking approval of a number of so-called first-day motions to operate their businesses without interruption. The companies are seeking court approval to continue to pay their more than 600 employees and key vendors.

The companies don't have a debtor-in-possession, or DIP, loan but they intend to draw on $59 million in letters of credit from a unit of German engineering firm Foster Wheeler AG (FWLT).

Those letters of credit, however, have been the subject of an arbitration dispute with contractors Siemens Energy Inc., and the North American units of Norwegian construction firm Kvaerner ASA (KVAER.OS) and Foster Wheeler.

Olivia Offner, spokeswoman for First Reserve, declined to comment, as did spokesmen for Longview and Foster Wheeler. A spokeswoman for Siemens couldn't immediately comment. A Kvaerner representative didn't respond to requests for comment.

The law firm of Kirkland & Ellis LLP is handling the Chapter 11 case, Alvarez & Marsal is acting as restructuring adviser and Lazard is serving as Longview's investment banker.

Judge Brendan Linehan Shannon, who has been assigned the case, has scheduled a hearing on the companies' first-day requests for Sept. 3.

(Dow Jones Daily Bankruptcy Review covers news about distressed companies and those under bankruptcy protection. Go to http://dbr.dowjones.com)

Write to Patrick Fitzgerald at patrick.fitzgerald@wsj.com and Emily Glazer at emily.glazer@wsj.com

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

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