Annual Report Form U5S
Table of Contents

 

SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

Washington, D. C. 20549

 


 

FORM U5S

 

ANNUAL REPORT

 

For the Fiscal Year Ended March 31, 2003

 

Filed pursuant to the Public Utility Holding Company Act of 1935

by

 


 

Scottish Power plc

 

1 Atlantic Quay

Glasgow G2 8SP

Scotland UK

 



Table of Contents

Scottish Power plc

FORM U5S

2003

 

TABLE OF CONTENTS

 

ITEM

        PAGE NUMBER

1.   

System Companies and Investments Therein as of March 31, 2003

   3
2.   

Acquisitions or Sales of Utility Assets

   3
3.   

Issue, Sale, Pledge, Guarantee or Assumptions of System Securities

   3
4.   

Acquisition, Redemption or Retirement of System Securities

   3
5.   

Investments in Securities of Nonsystem Companies

   3
6.   

Officers and Directors

   4
7.   

Contributions and Public Relations

   16
8.   

Service, Sales and Construction Contracts

   16
9.   

Wholesale Generators and Foreign Utility Companies

   17
10.   

Financial Statements and Exhibits

   Form SE


Table of Contents

ITEMS

 

ITEM 1.   SYSTEM COMPANIES AND INVESTMENTS THEREIN AS OF March 31, 2003.

 

See Attachment 1

 

ITEM 2.   ACQUISITION OR SALES OF UTILITY ASSETS.

 

Excluding transactions reported in a certificate filed pursuant to Rule 24, provide a brief description of acquisitions or sales, if any, by each system company, of utility plant in service or under construction of any electric utility company or retail gas utility company for the production, transmission or distribution of electric energy or distribution of natural or manufactured gas, stating the name of the system company (both system companies if the transfer is within the system), the consideration, a brief description of the transaction, the location and the exemption claimed for transactions which have the effect of adding or disposing of a discrete territory separately served or to be served at retail by another utility company, cooperative or government (as defined in Section 2(c) of the Act), and transactions which involve a consideration of more than one million dollars including reasonably estimated completion costs incurred or eliminated by transfer of facilities under construction. Other transactions need not be identified.

 

None

 

ITEM 3.   ISSUE, SALE, PLEDGE, GUARANTEE OR ASSUMPTION OF SYSTEM SECURITIES.

 

On December 19, 2002, PacifiCorp issued 14,851,485 shares of its common stock to PacifiCorp Holdings, Inc., an intermediary holding company, at a total price of $150 million or $10.10 per share.

 

See also Rule 24 Certificate Notifications filed on 11/29/02 and 6/30/03 SEC File No. 70-9669.

 

ITEM 4.   ACQUISITION, REDEMPTION, OR RETIREMENT OF SYSTEM SECURITIES.

 

Numbers in Thousands

 

Fiscal Year 2003

 

Investment


  

Name of

Acquiring/

Redeeming

Company


   No. of
Shares


  

Consider.
Principal
Amount

£ or $


   %
voting


   Book Value
£–$


  

Author./

Exemption


        PacifiCorp

        $7.48 No par serial preferred stock

   PacifiCorp    75,000    $ 7,500,000    N/A    $ 7,500,000    Rule 42

 

ITEM 5.   INVESTMENTS IN SECURITIES OF NONSYSTEM COMPANIES.

 

None

 

3


Table of Contents
ITEM 6.   OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS.

 

PART I.

 

The following are the abbreviations to be used for principal business address and positions.

 

Principal Business Address

   N/A

Position


   Code

Director

   D

President

   P

Chief Executive Officer

   CEO

Chief Financial Officer

   CFO

Chief Accounting Officer

   CAO

Chief Information Officer

   CIO

Chief Production Officer

   CPO

Senior Executive Vice President

   SEVP

Executive Vice President

   EVP

Senior Vice President

   SVP

Financial Vice President

   FVP

Vice President

   VP

Controller/Comptroller

   C

Counsel

   L

Secretary

   S

Assistant Secretary

   AS

Treasurer

   T

Assistant Treasurer

   AT

General Manager

   GM

Managing Director

   MD

Commissioner

   M

 

Name and Principal Address


  

Title


   Code

EXECUTIVE DIRECTORS

         

Ian Russell

1 Atlantic Quay

Glasgow G2 8SP

  

Chief Executive

   CEO

Charles Berry

1 Atlantic Quay

Glasgow G2 8SP

  

Executive Director UK

   D

David Nish

1 Atlantic Quay

Glasgow G2 8SP

  

Finance Director

   CFO

Richard Peach

825 NE Multnomah

Suite 2000

Portland

Oregon 97232

  

Chief Financial Officer—PacifiCorp

   CFO

William D. Landels

825 NE Multnomah

Suite 2000

Portland

  

Executive Vice President—PacifiCorp

   EVP

 

4


Table of Contents

Oregon 97232

         

Andrew N. MacRitchie

825 NE Multnomah

Suite 2000

Portland

Oregon 97232

  

Executive Vice President—PacifiCorp

   EVP

Matthew Wright

825 NE Multnomah

Suite 2000

Portland

Oregon 97232

  

Executive Vice President—PacifiCorp

   EVP

Michael Pittman

825 NE Multnomah

Suite 2000

Portland

Oregon 97232

  

Senior Vice President—PacifiCorp

   SVP

Donald N. Furman

825 NE Multnomah

Suite 2000

Portland

Oregon 97232

  

Senior Vice President—PacifiCorp

   SVP

Andrew P. Haller

825 NE Multnomah

Suite 2000

Portland

Oregon 97232

  

Senior Vice President, General Counsel and Corporate Secretary—PacifiCorp

   SVP–L-S

Robert A. Klein

825 NE Multnomah

Suite 2000

Portland

Oregon 97232

  

Senior Vice President—PacifiCorp

   SVP

Robert A. Moir

825 NE Multnomah

Suite 2000

Portland

Oregon 97232

  

Senior Vice President—PacifiCorp

   SVP

A. Richard Walje

825 NE Multnomah

Suite 2000

Portland

Oregon 97232

  

Senior Vice President—PacifiCorp

   SVP

Barry G. Cunningham

825 NE Multnomah

Suite 2000

Portland

Oregon 97232

  

Senior Vice President—PacifiCorp

   SVP

Stan K. Watters

825 NE Multnomah

Suite 2000

Portland

Oregon 97232

  

Senior Vice President—PacifiCorp

   SVP

Donald D. Larson

825 NE Multnomah

Suite 2000

Portland

Oregon 97232

  

Vice President—PacifiCorp

   VP

Ernest E. Wessman

  

Vice President—PacifiCorp

   VP

 

5


Table of Contents

825 NE Multnomah

Suite 2000

Portland

Oregon 97232

         

Bruce N. Williams

825 NE Multnomah

Suite 2000

Portland

Oregon 97232

  

Treasurer—PacifiCorp

   T

Michael G. Jenkins

825 NE Multnomah

Suite 2000

Portland

Oregon 97232

  

Assistant Secretary—PacifiCorp

   AS

Alexander D. Tait

825 NE Multnomah

Suite 2000

Portland

Oregon 97232

  

Assistant Secretary—PacifiCorp

   AS

Larry O. Martin

825 NE Multnomah

Suite 2000

Portland

Oregon 97232

  

Assistant Secretary—PacifiCorp

   AS

Jeffery B. Erb

825 NE Multnomah

Suite 2000

Portland

Oregon 97232

  

Assistant Secretary—PacifiCorp

   AS

Tanya S. Sacks

825 NE Multnomah

Suite 2000

Portland

Oregon 97232

  

Assistant Treasurer—PacifiCorp

   AT

 

6


Table of Contents

NON-EXECUTIVE

DIRECTORS

         

CHARLES MILLER SMITH

1 Atlantic Quay

Glasgow G2 8SP

  

Chairman

   D

EUAN BAIRD

1 Atlantic Quay

Glasgow G2 8SP

  

Non-executive Director

   D

MAIR BARNES

1 Atlantic Quay

Glasgow G2 8SP

  

Non-executive Director

   D

PHILIP CARROLL

1 Atlantic Quay

Glasgow G2 8SP

  

Non-executive Director

   D

SIR PETER GREGSON

1 Atlantic Quay

Glasgow G2 8SP

  

Non-executive Director

   D

NOLAN KARRAS

1 Atlantic Quay

Glasgow G2 8SP

  

Non-executive Director

   D

NICK ROSE

1 Atlantic Quay

Glasgow G2 8SP

  

Non-executive Director

   D

EWEN MACPHERSON

1 Atlantic Quay

Glasgow G2 8SP

  

Non-executive Director

   D

OFFICERS

         

JULIAN BROWN

1 Atlantic Quay

Glasgow G2 8SP

  

Group Director, Strategy

   —  

DOMINIC FRY

1 Atlantic Quay

Glasgow G2 8SP

  

Group Director, Corporate Communications

   —  

Judith A. Johansen

825 NE Multnomah

Suite 2000

Portland

Oregon 97232

  

President and CEO—PacifiCorp

   P

 

7


Table of Contents

Terry Hudgens

825 NE Multnomah

Suite 2000

Portland

Oregon 97232

   Chief Executive Officer—PacifiCorp Power Marketing Inc.    —  

Ronnie Mercer

1 Atlantic Quay

Glasgow G2 8SP

   Group Director, Infrastructure    —  

Andrew Mitchell

1 Atlantic Quay

Glasgow G2 8SP

   Company Secretary    S

Michael J. Pittman

825 NE Multnomah

Suite 2000

Portland

Oregon 97232

   Group Director, Human Resources /SVP PacifiCorp    —  

James Stanley

1 Atlantic Quay

Glasgow G2 8SP

   Group Director, Legal    L

 

ITEM 6.   OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS.

 

Part II.   Financial Connections.

 

Name


  

Name and Location of

Financial Institution


  

Position held in

Financial

Institution


   Applicable
Exemption
Rule


Charles Miller Smith

   Goldman Sachs    Non-executive Director    Rule 70

Nolan Karras

   Beneficial Life Insurance Company and American General Savings Bank, both of USA    Non-executive Director    Rule 70

Ewen Macpherson

   Merrill Lynch New Energy Technology plc, UK   

Chairman

 

   Rule 70
     Foreign & Colonial Investment Trust plc, Pantheon International Participations plc, and Sussex Place Investment Management Limited, all of the UK    Non-executive Director     

 

8


Table of Contents
ITEM 6.   EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION—PART III.

 

(a) Summary Compensation Tables. The following tables set forth information concerning any Chief Executive Officer and the four most highly compensated executive officers for ScottishPower and PacifiCorp as of March 31, 2000, as defined by the Securities and Exchange Commission.

 

Key terms used in this Item will have the following meanings:-

 

ESP

Employee Savings Plan

 

ESOP

Employee Stock Ownership Plan

 

SBP

Supplemental Benefit Plan

 

ERISA

Employee Retirement Income S.A

 

EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

 

The following table sets forth information concerning compensation for services in all capacities to the Company for the years ended March 31, 2003, 2002 and 2001 of those persons who were the Chief Executive Officer of the Company during any portion of the year ended March 31, 2003 and the four other most highly compensated executive officers of the Company who were serving as executive officers at the end of the last completed fiscal year.

 

Summary Compensation Table

 

Name and

Principal

Position


  

Year


             Long-Term Compensation

  

ScottishPower
Performance
Shares(g)


  

All Other
Compensation(h)


      Annual Compensation(a)

   Restricted
Stock
Awards(d)


   Securities
Underlying
Options(e)


   LTIP
Payout(f)


     
      Salary

   Bonus(c)

              

Judith A. Johansen

   2003    $ 492,444    $ 149,767    $ —      61,825    $ —      9,199    $ 32,657

President and Chief

   2002      360,501      12,902      141,683    57,350      —      —        11,707

Executive Officer

   2001      110,834      150,000      131,138    57,350      —      —        3,169

William D. Landels (b)

   2003      431,890      116,141      —      79,433      —      31,773      85,462

Executive Vice President

   2002      424,409      61,818      —      39,855      —      25,781      126,471
     2001      323,899      80,570      —      —        —      14,408      107,030

Andrew P. Haller

   2003      310,930      132,020      —      19,165      23,069    5,069      32,650

Senior Vice President,

   2002      299,425      8,392      112,768    56,800      23,644    —        10,524

General Counsel and Corporate Secretary

   2001      86,042      110,000      104,375    56,800      —      —        2,917

Michael J. Pittman

   2003      300,000      47,057      —      50,954      —      7,581      28,310

Senior Vice President

   2002      275,167      150,008      53,203    13,500      —      —        20,449
     2001      249,749      —        —      —        —      —        12,813

 

9


Table of Contents

A. Richard Walje

   2003    275,500    95,550    —      24,840    —      6,570    29,183

Senior Vice President

   2002    240,375    128,854    53,203    14,000    12,222    —      19,606
     2001    214,002    —      —      —      13,729    —      15,724

 

(a)   May include amounts deferred pursuant to the Compensation Reduction Plan, under which key executives and directors may defer receipt of cash compensation until retirement or a preset future date. Amounts deferred are invested in ScottishPower ADS or a cash account on which interest is paid at a rate equal to the Moody’s Intermediate Corporate Bond Yield for AA-rated Public Utility Bonds.

 

(b)   Salary includes foreign housing benefits paid to Mr. Landels. These amounts were $99,285.00, $126,610.58 and $66,322.75 for the years ended March 31, 2003, 2002 and 2001, respectively.

 

(c)   Amounts in this column for the year ended March 31, 2003 include a promotion bonus in the amount of $41,556 for Ms. Johansen. Amounts in this column for the year ended March 31, 2002 include a retention bonus in the amount of $125,610 and $104,000 for Messrs. Pittman and Walje, respectively. Amounts in this column for the year ended March 31, 2001 include special bonuses and hire-on bonuses. These amounts are $150,000 and $110,000 for Ms. Johansen and Mr. Haller, respectively.

 

(d)   On March 31, 2003, the aggregate value of all restricted stock holdings, based on the market value of ScottishPower ADS at March 31, 2003, without giving effect to the diminution of value attributed to the restrictions on such stock, was $146,939, $116,951, $46,900 and $46,900, for Ms. Johansen and Messrs. Haller, Pittman and Walje, respectively. The aggregate number of restricted share holdings was 6,125, 4,875, 1,955 and 1,955 for Ms. Johansen and Messrs. Haller, Pittman and Walje, respectively. Regular quarterly dividends are paid on the restricted stock. Participants may defer receipt of restricted stock awards to their stock accounts under the Compensation Reduction Plan.

 

(e)   Amounts for the year ended March 31, 2003 represent the number of ADS option shares awarded under the ScottishPower ExSOP during the year ended March 31, 2003, except for Mr. Landels’ options, which are for ScottishPower Ordinary Shares. Amounts shown for the years ended March 31, 2002 and 2001 represent the number of ADS options awarded under the PacifiCorp Stock Incentive Plan.

 

(f)   Represents the dollar value of restricted stock shares awarded under the PacifiCorp Stock Incentive Plan that vested and were distributed to the named officer.

 

(g)   Represents the number of ScottishPower ADS, except for Mr. Landels, which are Ordinary Shares, contingently granted in 2003, 2002 and 2001 that can be earned under the terms of the ScottishPower LTIP.

 

(h)   Amounts shown for the year ended March 31, 2003 include:

 

  (i)   Company contributions to the PacifiCorp K Plus Employee Savings and Stock Ownership Plan for each of Ms. Johansen and Messrs. Haller, Pittman and Walje were $11,487, $11,613, $9,450 and $9,905, respectively.

 

  (ii)   Portions of premiums on term life insurance policies that PacifiCorp paid for Ms. Johansen and Messrs. Haller, Pittman and Walje in the amounts of $683, $425, $410 and $373, respectively. These benefits are available to all employees.

 

 

10


Table of Contents
  (iii)   This column also includes vehicle allowances paid to Ms. Johansen and Messrs. Landels, Haller, Pittman and Walje in the amounts of $9,000, $12,000, $9,000, $9,000, and $9,000, respectively.

 

  (iv)   During each of the years ended March 31, 2003, 2002 and 2001, Mr. Landels purchased 411 shares under the ScottishPower Employee Share Ownership Plan. Under the terms of the plan, ScottishPower matches the number of shares bought by the individual. The value of the 411 shares bought by ScottishPower for Mr. Landels was $2,321 for each of the years ended March 31, 2003, 2002 and 2001.

 

  (v)   Includes additional international assignment payments of $71,141, $112,150 and $92,709 for the years ended March 31, 2003, 2002 and 2001, respectively, for cost of living and foreign service premium, according to the terms of Mr. Landels’ contract.

 

 

11


Table of Contents

Option Grants in Last Fiscal Year

 

     Individual Grants(a)

Name


   Number of
Securities
Underlying
Options
Granted (b)


   % of Total
Options
Granted to
Employees in
Fiscal Year


    Exercise or
Base Price
£ or $/Sh


  

Expiration
Date


  

Potential Realizable

Value at Assumed

Annual Rates of

Stock Price Appreciation
for Option Term


              5%

   10%

William D. Landels

   79,433    2.33 %   £ 4.06    May 2, 2012    £ 202,817    £ 405,634

Judith A. Johansen

   61,825    6.32     $ 23.55    May 2, 2012    $ 915,658    $ 2,320,455

Andrew P. Haller

   19,165    1.95       23.55    May 2, 2012      283,842      719,312

Michael J. Pittman

   50,954    5.20       23.55    May 2, 2012      754,653      1,912,438

A. Richard Walje

   24,840    2.54       23.55    May 2, 2012      367,892      932,310

 

(a)   All options are for ScottishPower ADS, except Mr. Landels’ options, which are for ScottishPower Ordinary Shares. One ScottishPower ADS is equal to four ScottishPower Ordinary Shares. All options awarded were ScottishPower ExSOP grants, dated May 2, 2002.

 

(b)   All standard options become exercisable for one-third of the shares covered by the option on each of the first three anniversaries of the grant date and all enhanced options become exercisable after the third anniversary of the grant date. Mr. Landels’ options can be exercised only between the third and tenth anniversaries of the date of the grant, and exercise is subject to the satisfaction of a performance condition, that being a predetermined level of EPS growth over a maximum of a three-year performance period from the date of the grant.

 

Aggregated Option Exercises in 2003 and Year-End Option Values

 

Name


  

Shares

Acquired on
Exercise


  

Value
Realized


  

Number of

Securities Underlying

Unexercised Options at

March 31, 2003 (a)


  

Value of Unexercised

In-the-Money Options at
March 31, 2003


         Exercisable

   Unexercisable

   Exercisable

   Unexercisable

William D. Landels

   £ —      £ —      —      119,288    £ —      £ —  

Judith A. Johansen

   $ —      $ —      57,349    119,176    $ —      $ 27,203

Andrew P. Haller

     —        —      56,799    75,966      —        8,433

Michael J. Pittman

     —        —      121,983    114,058      —        22,420

A. Richard Walje

     —        —      97,070    81,839      —        10,930

 

(a)   All options are for ScottishPower ADS, except Mr. Landels’ options, which were for ScottishPower Ordinary Shares, and include options granted under the PacifiCorp Stock Incentive Plan and the ExSOP.

 

Severance Arrangements

 

The Company’s Executive Severance Plan provides severance benefits to certain executive-level employees who are designated by the Board, including the executive officers named in the Summary Compensation Table (other than Mr. Landels). Severance benefits are payable for voluntary terminations as a result of a “material alteration in position” that has a detrimental impact on the executive’s employment or involuntary terminations (including a

 

12


Table of Contents

Company-initiated resignation) for reasons other than cause. A “material alteration in position” includes:

 

    a material reduction in the scope of the executive’s duties and responsibilities or authority; or

 

    any reduction in base pay or a reduction in annualized base salary and target annual bonus of at least 15.0%, if the change is not due to a general reduction unrelated to the change in assignment.

 

The Executive Severance Plan also provides enhanced severance benefits in the event of certain terminations during the 24-month period following a qualifying change-in-control transaction. Executives designated by the Board are eligible for change-in-control benefits resulting from either a Company-initiated termination without “cause” or a resignation generally within two months after a “material alteration in position.” For this purpose, “cause” means the executive’s gross misconduct or gross negligence or conduct that indicates a reckless disregard for the consequences and has a material adverse effect on the Company or its affiliates, and “material alteration in position” means:

 

    a change in reporting relationship to a lower level;

 

    a material reduction in the scope of duties and responsibilities or in authority;

 

    relocation of work location to an office more than 100 miles from the executive’s office or more than 60 miles from the executive’s home; or

 

    a “material reduction in compensation,” which includes any reduction in annualized base salary or a reduction in the annualized base salary and target bonus opportunity combined of at least 15.0%, if the change is not due to a general reduction unrelated to the change in assignment.

 

If qualified for the enhanced severance benefits, an executive would receive severance pay in an amount equal to either two, two and one-half or three times the “annual cash compensation” of such executive, depending on the level set by the Board. “Annual cash compensation” is defined as annualized base salary, target annual incentive opportunity and annualized auto allowance in effect on the earlier of a material alteration or termination, whichever is greater. The Company is required to make an additional payment to compensate the executive for the effect of any excise tax. The executive would also receive continuation of subsidized health insurance from six to 24 months depending on length of service and a minimum of 12 months’ executive-level outplacement services.

 

The Executive Severance Plan does not apply to a termination for reasons of normal retirement, death or total disability or to a termination for cause or a voluntary termination other than as specified above. Except in the event of a change-in-control, the definition of cause is determined by the Company in its discretion and by the Board in the event of an appeal by the employee.

 

Other than in connection with a change in control, executives named in the Summary Compensation Table (other than Mr. Landels) are eligible for a severance payment equal to one or two times the executive’s total cash compensation, six months of health insurance benefits and outplacement benefits. For this purpose, total cash compensation includes annualized base salary, the target annual incentive opportunity and the annualized auto allowance in effect on the earlier of a material alteration or termination.

 

13


Table of Contents

Retirement Plans

 

The Company has adopted noncontributory defined benefit retirement plans for its employees, other than employees subject to collective bargaining agreements that do not provide for coverage. Certain executive officers, including the executive officers named in the Summary Compensation Table, other than Mr. Landels, are also eligible to participate in the Company’s nonqualified supplemental executive retirement plan. The following description assumes participation in both the retirement plans and the supplemental plan. Participants receive benefits at retirement payable for life based on length of service with the Company and average pay in the 60 consecutive months of highest pay out of the last 120 months, and pay for this purpose would include salary and annual incentive plan payments reflected in the Summary Compensation Table above. Benefits are based on 50.0% of final average pay plus up to an additional 15.0% of final average pay depending upon whether the Company meets certain performance goals set for each fiscal year by the Board. Participants may also elect actuarially equivalent alternative forms of benefits. Retirement benefits are reduced to reflect Social Security benefits as well as certain prior employer retirement benefits. Participants are entitled to receive full benefits upon retirement after age 60 with at least 15 years of service. Participants are also entitled to receive reduced benefits upon early retirement after age 55 or after age 50 with at least 15 years of service and five years of participation in the supplemental plan.

 

The following table shows the estimated annual retirement benefit payable upon retirement at age 60 as of March 31, 2003. Amounts in the table reflect payments from the retirement plan and the supplemental plan combined.

 

Estimated Annual Pension At Retirement (a)

 

Annual Pay at

Retirement Date


   Years of Service (b)

   5

   15

   25

   30

$

 

   200,000

   $ 43,333    $ 130,000    $ 130,000    $ 130,000
   

   400,000

     86,667      260,000      260,000      260,000
   

   600,000

     130,000      390,000      390,000      390,000
   

   800,000

     173,333      520,000      520,000      520,000
   

1,000,000

     216,667      650,000      650,000      650,000

 

(a)   The benefits shown in this table assume that the individual will remain in the employ of the Company until retirement at age 60, that the plans will continue in their present form and that the Company achieves its performance goals under the supplemental plan in all years.

 

(b)   The number of credited years of service used to compute benefits under the plans for Ms. Johansen and Messrs. Haller, Walje and Pittman are two, two, 17 and 23, respectively.

 

Retention Agreements

 

To retain executives who would otherwise have had the right to resign for any reason between 12 and 14 months following the ScottishPower Merger and qualify for the enhanced change-in-control supplemental retirement benefits, the Company entered into retention agreements with qualifying executives (Messrs. Pittman and Walje). Those retention agreements provided for the same enhanced supplemental retirement benefits if the qualifying executives satisfied the retention criteria. Qualifying executives were required to waive their rights to unilaterally resign and receive the enhanced

 

14


Table of Contents

supplemental retirement benefits, but they are now eligible to receive these same enhancements since they have continued employment through the established retention date of December 1, 2002.

 

These retention agreements also require qualifying executives to waive any rights to executive severance benefits, which they may have otherwise claimed due to material alterations in their positions as of the date of the retention agreement. Unless there is a subsequent “involuntarily termination” or “material alteration” in position as defined in the Severance Plan, this waiver of severance benefits applies to these executives through November 28, 2004. The executives’ waiver of severance benefits was in exchange for the enhanced supplemental retirement benefits described above, retention bonuses determined individually in the Company’s discretion for each executive and special stock option awards that vest over a three-year retention period at 25.0% for each of the first two years and 50.0% in the third year.

 

See also Attachment 2

 

ITEM 6.   OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS.

 

PART III.

 

(b)   Stock Ownership.

 

The following table sets forth certain information as of March 31, 2003 regarding the beneficial ownership of ordinary shares of ScottishPower by (1) each of the executive officers, (2) each director and (3) all executive officers and directors as a group. As of March 31, 2003, each of the directors and executive officers identified above and all directors and executive officers of the Company as a group owned less than 1% of the outstanding Ordinary Shares of ScottishPower.

 

Beneficial Owner


   Number of shares
at March 31, 2003 (a)(b)


Judith A. Johansen

   69,631

William D. Landels

   12,667

Andrew P. Haller

   54,664

Michael J. Pittman

   123,584

A. Richard Walje

   54,022

Barry G. Cunningham

   53,435

Nolan E. Karras

   30,650

Andrew N. MacRitchie

   15,802

Ian M. Russell

   87,741

Matthew R. Wright

   6,415

All executive officers and directors as a group (15 persons)

   618,097

 

(a)   Includes ownership of (i) shares held by family members even though beneficial ownership of such shares may be disclaimed, (ii) shares held for the account of such persons pursuant to the Company’s Compensation Reduction Plan and the Company’s K Plus Savings and Stock Ownership Plan and (iii) shares granted and vested or unvested shares for which the

 

 

15


Table of Contents
       individual has voting but not investment power under the Company’s Stock Incentive Plan.

 

(b)   Options granted in ScottishPower ADS under the Company’s Stock Incentive Plan have been converted into options in Ordinary Shares in the above table. One ADS equates to four Ordinary Shares.

 

On May 10, 2003, LTIP awards in the amount of 49,833, 34,971, 21,936, 31,395 and 28,779 were awarded to Ms. Johansen and Messrs. Landels, Haller, Pittman and Walje, respectively. Options under the ExSOP in the amount of 61,475, 58,285, 13,530, 38,729 and 17,751 were awarded to Ms. Johansen and Messrs. Landels, Haller, Pittman and Walje, respectively. All awards were for ADS, except for Mr. Landels, which were for Ordinary Shares.

 

See also Attachment 2

 

ITEM 7.   CONTRIBUTIONS AND PUBLIC RELATIONS.

 

(1) Expenditures, disbursements or payments, directly or indirectly, in money, goods or services, to or for the account of any political party, candidate for public office or holder of such office, or any committee or agent thereof by registrant.

 

None—ScottishPower is a politically neutral organization.

 

ITEM 8.   SERVICE, SALES AND CONSTRUCTION CONTRACTS

 

Excluding (i) transactions included in the annual report on Form U-13-60 of a service company, (ii) the sharing of costs of jointly owned facilities or jointly employed personnel, (iii) contracts for the purchase, sale or interchange of electricity or gas, and (iv) contracts between an exempt wholesale generator or a foreign utility company and a system company, as reported under Item 9, infra, provide the following information:

 

Part I. Furnish the information required by the following table as to contracts for services, including engineering or construction services, or goods supplied or sold by a system company to another system company, and state, in the tabulation or by footnote, the date of the contract and whether it remained in effect at year end.

 

See Attachment 3

 

Part II. Does any system company have a contract to purchase services or goods from any affiliate (other than a system company), or from a company in which any officer or director of the receiving company is a partner or owns 5% or more of any class of equity securities?

 

No

 

If the answer to Part II is yes, and the contract has not already been reported in Item 6, report such contracts in substantially the same detail as specified for Part I, also describing the affiliation.

 

Part III. Does any system company employ any other person for the performance on a continuing basis of management, supervisory or financial advisory services?

 

16


Table of Contents

No

 

If the answer to Part III is yes, state the name of each such person, describe the contract, and the scope of the services and the annual consideration.

 

ITEM 9.   WHOLESALE GENERATORS AND FOREIGN UTILITY COMPANIES.

 

Part I(a)

 

Name of Company and
Principal Location


 

Owner


 

Descrip. of Facilities


 

Aggregate Investment
Amount £-$


 

Earnings as of 3/31/03


 

Company Debt/Eq.

Ratio 3/31/03


ScottishPower

U.K. plc

Scotland

  Scottish Power plc   See Form 6K filed 7-25-03  

£592 million

$947 million

 

See SEC File

No. 001-14676

and Exhibit F

 

See SEC File

No. 001-14676

and Exhibit F

Manweb plc

Scotland

  Genscot Limited   See Form 6K filed 7-25-03  

£895 million

$1,432 million

 

See SEC File

No. 001-14676

and Exhibit F

 

See SEC File

No. 001-14676

and Exhibit F

Flying Cloud Power

Partners, LLC

—Iowa

  PPM Energy, Inc  

44 MW wind generation

project—(UC)

  $1 million   N/A   100% Debt

Klamath Energy

LLC Oregon

  PPM Energy, Inc   100 MW gas fired peaking plan   $51 million   ($1 million)   100% Debt

Klondike Wind

Power LLC

—Oregon

  PPM Energy, Inc   24 MW wind generation project   $16.9 million   $.02 million   100% Debt

Moraine Wind

LLC

Minnesota

  PPM Energy, Inc   51 MW wind generation project—(UC)   $11.3 million   N/A   100% Debt

Phoenix Wind

Power LLC

California

  PPM Energy, Inc   2.1 MW wind generation project   $1.8 million   $.01 million   3.2

 

Key terms: FUCO means Foreign Utility Company—FUCO-S means a subsidiary of a FUCO—EWG means Exempt Wholesale Generator—IS means Intermediate Subsidiary—PP means Project Parent—SPS means Special Purpose Subsidiary

 

Part II Organization chart showing relationship of each EWG and FUCO to other system companies.

 

See Attachment 4

 

Part III State aggregate investment in EWGs and FUCOS, respectively. Also state ratio of aggregate investment to the aggregate capital investment of the ScottishPower plc.

 

Aggregate Investment in FUCOs—USD $2,357 million

 

17


Table of Contents

Aggregate Investment in EWGs—USD $82 million

 

Ratio—38%

 

ITEM 10   FINANCIAL STATEMENTS AND EXHIBITS

 

Exhibit A

Annual Report Form 20-F—See SEC File No. 001-14676 Dated 6/27/2003.

 

Exhibit B

Articles of organization and bylaws for each subsidiary

See Exhibit B of Form U5S filed 7-31-2001 File No. 001-14676

 

Exhibit C

Indenture relating to funded debt.

See Exhibit C of Form U5S filed 7-31-2001 File No. 001-14676

 

Exhibit D

Copy of tax allocation agreement

See Exhibit D of Form U5S filed 7-31-2001 File No. 001-14676

 

Exhibit E

Documents requested pursuant to Financing Order

 

See Attachment 3

 

Copies of other documents prescribed by rule or order, such as Rule 48(b), for incorporation into the annual report; providedthat any reports to State Commissions included as an exhibit shall be filed in paper, even if submitted by an electronic filer.

 

Exhibit F

Financial Statements

 

See also Form 20F—SEC File No. 001-14676 Dated 6/27/2003.

See also Form 20F—SEC File No. 001-14676 Dated 6/27/2003 and Form 10K filed on 6/3/2003 SEC File No. 001-05152

 

Exhibit G

Financial Data Schedule

Financial Data Schedules no longer required

 

If, at the time an annual report on this form is filed, the registrant is required to submit this report and any amendments thereto electronically via EDGAR, the registrant shall furnish Financial Data Schedules. The Schedule shall set forth the financial and other data specified below that are applicable to the registrant, each subsidiary and the consolidated system.

 

Item No.

  

Caption Heading


1

   Total Net Utility Plant

2

   Other Property and Investments

3

   Total Current Assets

4

   Total Deferred Charges

5

   Balancing amount for Total Assets

6

   Total Assets

 

18


Table of Contents
7   

Common Stock

8   

Capital Surplus, Paid In

9   

Retained Earnings

10   

Total Common Stockholders Equity

11   

Preferred Stock Subject to Mandatory Redemption

12   

Preferred Stock Not Subject to Mandatory Redemption

13   

Long Term Debt, Net

14   

Short Term Notes

15   

Notes Payable

16   

Commercial Paper

17   

Long Term Debt—Current Portion

18   

Preferred Stock—Current Portion

19   

Obligations Under Capital Leases

20   

Obligations Under Capital Leases—Current Portion

21   

Balancing amount for Capitalization and Liabilities

22   

Total Capitalization and Liabilities

23   

Gross Operating Revenue

24   

Federal and State Income Taxes Expense

25   

Other Operating Expenses

26   

Total Operating Expenses

27   

Operating Income (Loss)

28   

Other Income (Loss), Net

29   

Income Before Interest Charges

30   

Total Interest Charges

31   

Net Income

32   

Preferred Stock Dividends

33   

Earnings Available For Common Stock

34   

Common Stock Dividends

35   

Total Annual Interest Charges on All Bonds

36   

Cash Flow From Operations

37   

Earnings Per Share— Primary

38   

Earnings Per Share—Fully Diluted

 

Exhibit H

Organizational Chart

 

Exhibit I

Separate Financials for EWGs and FUCOs

 

See Exhibit F

See also Form 20F—SEC File No. 001-14676 Dated 6/27/2003 and Form 10K filed on 6/3/2003 SEC File No. 001-05152

 

If the EWG or foreign utility company is a “majority-owned associate company,” as defined in rule 53(a)(2)(ii), submit the most recently available audited balance sheet (including a capitalization table), income statement and cash flow statement of such EWG or foreign utility company. For all other EWG or foreign utility company subsidiaries of the registered holding company, submit either an audited (if available) or an unaudited balance sheet (including a capitalization table), income statement and cash flow statement of such EWG or foreign utility company. Submit a summary of any analytical reviews and conclusions drawn therefrom of majority-held EWG or foreign utility company subsidiaries performed in the ordinary course of an audit of the registered holding company.

 

See Form 20F—SEC File No. 001-14676 Dated 6/27/2003.

 

19


Table of Contents

SIGNATURE

 

Pursuant to the requirements of the Public Utility Holding Company Act of 1935, the registrant has caused this annual report to be duly signed on its behalf in the City of Portland and Country of The United States of America on the 31st day of July, 2003.

 

SCOTTISHPOWER PLC

By

 

/S/    DAVID T. NISH


    David T. Nish
    Finance Director

 

Attest:

/S/    JEFFERY B. ERB


Jeffery B. Erb
Assistant Secretary of PacifiCorp

 

Verification

 

The undersigned, being duly sworn, deposes and says that he has duly executed the attached annual report dated July 31, 2003, for and on behalf of ScottishPower; that he is the Finance Director of such company; and that all action by stockholders, directors, and other bodies necessary to authorize deponent to execute and file such instrument has been taken. Deponent further says that he is familiar with such instrument and the contents thereof, and that the facts therein set forth are true to the best of his knowledge, information and belief.

 

   

/S/    DAVID T. NISH


 

Subscribed and sworn to before me

this              day of July, 2003

 

/s/


My commission expires:    

 

20