Energy Future Holdings Corp. weathered its debut bankruptcy-court hearing on Thursday, clearing a few essential early motions at a session that made it apparent the energy company faces opposition to its restructuring strategy.

Judge Christopher Sontchi granted interim approval to measures that allow the Texas power-seller to move ahead on two of three multibillion-dollar bankruptcy finance packages as it attempts to gather support for a restructuring that will split the company in two, and drop tens of billions of dollars of debt from its balance sheet.

One of the largest bankruptcies on record, Energy Future's Chapter 11 debut played to three packed courtrooms in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Wilmington, Del. The company is targeting a bankruptcy exit within a year, but the consensus it attempted to forge in months of negotiations remains out of reach.

Hearings are slated to continue on Friday, in a bankruptcy that was billed as a consensual arrangement but is shaping into a battleground, with investors in $42 billion worth of debt jockeying for position.

A minority of top-ranking lenders have signed on to a pact pledging them to support the restructuring. "We expect that number to grow significantly over the next weeks and months," Energy Future lawyer Edward Sassower said on Thursday. The company refuted allegations it steered the restructuring talks to benefit favored creditor constituencies at the expense of others.

After months of talks aimed at enlisting strong backing for its effort to lighten a $42 billion debt load, Energy Future filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection on Tuesday without sufficient pledges of support to push its restructuring plan through the process without a fight. Battles have erupted on both fronts of the restructuring, which involves two major subsidiaries, Texas Competitive Electric Holdings and Energy Future Intermediate Holding.

Lower-ranking bondholders of the Texas Competitive Electric subsidiary attacked the restructuring proposal, which gives the revamped business and cash to first-lien creditors, leaving bondholders with an estimated 2.5 cents on the dollar, or nothing at all.

"It is not a global restructuring. It is a judicially supervised foreclosure proceeding," said Christopher Shore, a lawyer for investors in $2.74 billion worth of unsecured Texas Competitive Electric bonds, which are slated to be wiped out if Energy Future's restructuring is approved.

Secured bondholders owed $1.6 billion by Texas Competitive Electric say there is more value than is reflected in Energy Future's restructuring calculations, yet they were shut out of negotiations. "We desperately want our day in court," said Edward Weisfelner, a lawyer for the secured second-lien bond trustee.

Fidelity Investment Management and bond giant Pimco have signed on to Energy Future's restructuring agreement, adding support at various levels of the debt. However, their combined holdings account for only a minority of Energy Future Intermediate's top-level debt. Most first-lien and second-lien holders haven't signed up in support.

Keith Wofford, lawyer for the trustee for Energy Future Intermediate's first-lien bonds, said many of the subsidiary's first-lien lenders "actively oppose" the company's restructuring proposal.

In its Chapter 11 filing on Tuesday, the Dallas-based company cited an overload of debt from a 2007 leveraged buyout, increased competition resulting from deregulation, and falling natural gas prices.

Write to Peg Brickley at peg.brickley@wsj.com

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