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USA and Europe
Babcock & Brown Ltd. Chief Executive Officer Phil Green is under increasing pressure to sell European wind farms to stave off a possible debt review, triggered by a share collapse this week. ...A successful sale could trigger a rebound in Babcock's shares, which trade at less than three times earnings after falling 83 percent this year, said ABN Amro Holdings NV analyst John Heagerty. Failure may increase the risk of banks demanding early repayment on A$2.8 billion of debt.
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General|
Australia / New Zealand]
Royal Dutch Shell believes the future of wind power is in North America, where it is redoubling its efforts after pulling out of the large-scale London Array wind farm project in the UK.
"The European theatre has been built out,'' Dick Williams, president of Shell Wind Energy, told the FT.
The growing importance of wind power originally drew Shell into what was set to be the world's biggest offshore wind farm, the 1 gigawattLondon Array, that put the UK in line to be the world leader in building offshore wind farms. But on May 2 Shell said it was selling its stake in the project to turn attention to North America.
Mr Williams draws attention to the large tracts of available land in unpopulated areas in the US and Canada that enable cheaper on-shore expansion, against the more expensive option of developing offshore projects in Europe.
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General]
The chief executive officer of Suzlon Energy Ltd., the world's fifth-largest wind-turbine producer by sales, has resigned amid growing questions about the Indian company's fast-paced growth.
Andre Horbach, a former senior executive for General Electric Co. in Europe, stepped down on Friday, 16 months after taking the job. ...Suzlon has benefited from a global shortfall of turbines from more-established producers like GE and Denmark's Vestas AS, the world's largest producer in terms of sales. ...But Suzlon is also facing headwinds. Blades on turbines that it has sold to power producers in the U.S. have begun cracking. The company says only 45 blades have been affected, but it plans to spend $30 million on repairs and to strengthen almost all the blades it has sold in the U.S.
Suzlon's efforts to upgrade its technology have also run into problems.
But, like most weather reports, the outlook for large windmill projects is anything but predictable, plagued as they are by noise complaints, endangered species and fickle commercial backers. In the United Kingdom, a giant wind farm planned for the Thames River estuary now appears to be in jeopardy after Dutch oil giant Shell announced it would pull out of the project. ...The company has said it will continue to pursue wind power projects in the United States.
Yet U.S. wind power projects have run into some snags of their own.
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General]
Turbulence ahead: India windmill empire begins to show cracks
April 18, 2008 by Tom Wright in Wall Street Journal
April 18, 2008 by Tom Wright in Wall Street Journal
In a filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission in February, Edison Mission Energy, a unit of Edison International, said the 144-foot-long windmill blades it recently bought from Suzlon have begun to split at three wind-power sites it operates in the Midwest. Suzlon has recalled 1,251 blades from its top-of-the-line turbines, which represent the majority of blades the company has sold to date in the U.S..
Its troubles don't end there. A year ago, the company bought a controlling stake in a large German turbine manufacturer, REpower Systems AG, in one of India's biggest overseas acquisitions. ...Now, Suzlon can't get its hands on the blueprints. Hamstrung by a German corporate law, Suzlon must offer to buy out minority shareholders before it can demand REpower's designs. It's unlikely that the company could make a tender offer until 2009, say people with knowledge of the companies. ...Mr. Kher blamed the cracks on the Midwest's unexpectedly violent changes in wind direction. Though Mr. Tanti says that only 45 blades have cracked, Suzlon says it will add an extra lamination layer to almost all of the blades it has shipped to the U.S. To repair cracked blades and reinforce the rest, the company expects to spend $30 million.
Iberdrola Upgrades Gamesa Stake To 24% In Investment Split
March 7, 2008 by Santiago Perez in Dow Jones Newswires
March 7, 2008 by Santiago Perez in Dow Jones Newswires
Iberdrola SA (IBE.MC) Friday said it increased its stake in Gamesa SA (GAM.MC) to nearly 24%, getting another 4.63% of the Spanish wind- turbine maker previously in hands of an investment vehicle it partly-owned.
Iberdrola, based in Bilbao, northern Spain, is the world's biggest wind-power generator. Gamesa, also from Bilbao, is Europe's second largest wind-turbine maker after Denmark's Vestas Wind Systems A/S (VWS.KO). Gamesa accounts for around 15% of all wind-turbines sold in the world.
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General]
When the decision of whether to pay more is expressed in terms of real currency, the survey found even greater reluctance to go green. The European Commission estimates that it would cost each household the equivalent of $220 per month to cut greenhouse gas emissions and use more renewable energy. When faced with that number, strong majorities of bill-paying adults in all six countries said they would be unlikely to pay the higher amount, the survey found.
"Until people are forced to do so, or the price for renewable energy comes down considerably, people will not make the ‘green' choice," the Harris Interactive survey said in commentary on the findings. "This is especially true as economies around the globe tighten. When it comes to food or solar power, food will win for the consumer each time."
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General]
In what implies a Rs.1 billion ($25 million) hit on its balance sheet for the current quarter, leading wind power equipment-maker Suzlon Energy will refit wind turbine blades for a project in the US, the company said Monday. “The company will do a retrofit programme to resolve blade-cracking issues discovered during the operations of some of its S88 turbines in the US,” the company informed the Bombay Stock Exchange Monday.
As green power investments rise, a fear they are being misguided
February 28, 2008 by James Kanter in International Herald Tribune
February 28, 2008 by James Kanter in International Herald Tribune
Once-trendy biofuels like ethanol produced from corn are now being derided by the authorities, who say the fuels have little value in the fight against global warming. Vital components for windmills and solar cells have run short over the past year, requiring expensive projects to a halt. Meanwhile, subsidies for renewable energy remain at the whim of politicians, creating a boom and bust cycle for wind farms and solar projects, particularly in the United States.
Such a risky environment means some bankers are placing bets on projects that are unlikely to develop into serious, profitable alternates to fossil fuels, and could ultimately slow investment flows
"Some of these green investments are going in the wrong direction," said Yvo de Boer, the executive secretary of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change. "Very well-intentioned projects can go awry, particularly where government policies on cutting emissions aren't clear." ..."The world is repricing risk, and these are risky assets," Liebreich said, referring to renewable energy investments.
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General]
Adults in five largest European countries and the U.S. supportive of renewable energy, but unwilling to pay much more for it
February 26, 2008 by Harris Interactive in The News & Observer
February 26, 2008 by Harris Interactive in The News & Observer
As energy costs continue to soar, and an increased reliance on traditional oil and coal is questioned, alternate sources of energy are examined more closely. Many in the five largest countries in Europe and in the United States like the idea of renewable energy, but do not want to pay any more for renewable energy sources. A majority of adults who have some form of responsibility for paying household energy bills in Great Britain (54%) and Germany (50%), pluralities in Italy (44%), France (42%) and the U.S. (40%), as well as just over one-third of adults responsible for paying household energy bills in Spain (35%), all say they would be willing to pay nothing more for energy if it was from renewable sources.
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General]
Is solar power facing a boom or a bust?
February 12, 2008 by Gerard Wynn and Eva Kuehnen in International Herald Tribune
February 12, 2008 by Gerard Wynn and Eva Kuehnen in International Herald Tribune
Prospects for the solar power sector are puzzling investors juggling on the one hand a possible dot-com-style bust and on the other fresh support in Europe, home to one-third of the world's market.
The solar power industry uses the same raw material as the semiconductor industry, silicon, and may share a similar boom-bust path, according to some analysts. The semiconductor industry collapsed in 2000 amid a dot-com bust that pulled demand for electronic chips.
Solar companies saw their share prices skyrocket last year, but many endured a steep fall in January, halving in the case of one market leader, Renewable Energy, which is based in Oslo.
Such falls reflected a view that solar power valuations had run ahead of themselves.
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General]
GWEC figures wind power's capacity in 2005 was about 24%-that is, wind turbines spin 1 hour out of 4, year-round.
That will improve, but slowly. Bigger and taller turbines, in more favorable locations-especially offshore-will make wind turbines more efficient. But it will be a long time before wind power's paper strength starts to be reflected in real electricity generation. GWEC's own figures point to wind power creeping toward 30% efficiency over the next twenty years.
Wind power may be the most mature horse in the renewable-energy stable. But even a thoroughbred is going to have a tough time catching up with the supertanker that is the fossil-fueled energy establishment.
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Technology|
Energy Policy]
Tom Murley, head of UK private equity group HgCapital's renewable energy team, has warned clean energy stocks could be about to fall. At a conference held by Financial News last week, he said: "We are at the peak of inflated expectations." ...Murley, who heads the largest team of renewable energy specialists in the UK private equity market, said long-term prospects for quality clean energy companies are bright. But he compared the soaring price of clean energy stocks with the technology bull market of the late 1990s and argued innovation leads to overexuberance in stock markets. This is followed by disillusionment as competing products develop and investors realize profits will disappoint. A steady rise out of the trough follows as quality companies start to make headway.
Investment banks seek fees and returns from renewable energy sector
December 3, 2007 by Heidi Moore in Financial News
December 3, 2007 by Heidi Moore in Financial News
...global investment bank Lehman Brothers agreed to advise and finance the $700m Cape Wind project, the US’s first offshore wind farm located near Nantucket Island and a landmark cause for many environmentalists.
This March, Goldman Sachs sold its investment – redubbed Horizon Wind Energy – to Portugal’s largest utility, EDP, for more than $2.1bn, making a profit of $900m. But Lehman Brothers’ project, despite early state-level approvals, has been stuck in bureaucratic purgatory from which it is unlikely to emerge soon.
The problem: Nantucket’s millionaire residents oppose the wind farm, which they claim would ruin their ocean views.
The contrast between the outcome of the Zilkha investment and the Cape Wind project illustrates the unpredictability of the clean technology sector. “There is no doubt in my mind that renewable energy is like other tech start-ups, where some will succeed and many will not.”
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Impact on Economy|
Tax Breaks & Subsidies]
THE tiny Greek island of Serifos, a popular tourist destination, depends on its postcard views of sandy beaches, Cycladic homes and sunsets that blend sea and sky into a clean wash of color. So when a mining and energy company floated a plan earlier this year to build 87 industrial wind turbines on more than a third of the island, the Serifos mayor, Angeliki Synodinou, called it her "worst nightmare."..."These are not just one or two turbines spinning majestically in the blue sky and billowing clouds," said Lisa Linowes, executive director of Industrial Wind Action Group, an international advocacy group based in New Hampshire that opposes wind farms.
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Impact on Landscape|
Tourism]
Sweden Turns to a Promising Power Source, With Flaws
November 23, 2007 by Mark Landler in The New York Times
November 23, 2007 by Mark Landler in The New York Times
Sweden’s gleaming wind park is entering service at a time when wind energy is coming under sharper scrutiny, not just from hostile neighbors, who complain that the towers are a blot on the landscape, but from energy experts who question its reliability as a source of power. ...As wind energy has matured as an industry, its image has changed — from a clean, even elegant, alternative to fossil fuels to a renewable energy source with advantages and drawbacks, like any other.
“The environmental benefits of wind are not as great as its champions claim,” said Euan C. Blauvelt, research director of ABS Energy Research, an independent market research firm in London. “You’ve still got to have backup sources of power, like coal-fired plants.”
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General]
Group launches global standard for carbon credits
November 18, 2007 by Christopher Hinton in Market Watch
November 18, 2007 by Christopher Hinton in Market Watch
A coalition of environmentalists and businessmen have joined forces to launch a standardized, international marketplace for trading carbon emissions credits they say will be more effective in the fight against global warming than regional efforts currently taking shape. ...For example, a wind farm project in West Virginia producing enough green energy to offset 500 tons of carbon emissions receives 500 credits. The project managers can then sell those credits in the marketplace to businesses that produce emissions. Polluting businesses are not required to buy the credits, but, Harris said, it's good public relations for a company to offset their carbon emissions and it can act as a hedge against future regulation.
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General]
Renewable cos may slide on fears US to cut tax credits for
November 13, 2007 by Jonathank Gleave in Forbes
November 13, 2007 by Jonathank Gleave in Forbes
Shares in renewable energy companies with assets in the US could see further declines tomorrow on ongoing fears that the US energy bill might be passed this week without including tax incentives for generators and promoters of renewable energy, market sources said. ...Yesterday, website renewableenergyaccess.com reported that the Democrat house leaders in the US are preparing to cede to demands from Republicans and remove all tax breaks for renewable energy companies from the bill in order to push it through parliament before the Thanksgiving break on November 16.
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General|
Energy Policy]
Utilities tap into demand for renewable energy IPOs
November 8, 2007 by Dawn Cowie in Financial News
November 8, 2007 by Dawn Cowie in Financial News
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General]
European power companies breeze into the U.S. wind farm business
November 6, 2007 by Peter Maloney in The New York Times
November 6, 2007 by Peter Maloney in The New York Times
The European Union has taken the lead on many climate change issues - from ratifying the Kyoto Protocol to passing laws to require and encourage the development of renewable energy. Why, then, are so many European energy companies looking to invest in the United States?
For António Mexia, the chief executive of Energías de Portugal, the answer is simple. "The United States is the fastest-growing market in the world for wind power," he said. "If we want to be a leader, we have to be here." ..."In America you can put up a 200- or 300-megawatt wind park," Mexia said. "You can't do that in Europe" because of the lack of open space for such large wind farms.
There is also more potential for growth in the United States, where wind farms account for barely 1 percent of installed generating capacity. In some EU countries, that figure is as high as 10 percent.