• Wind power industry in moment of reckoning as stocks fall and earnings

    From Greta Thunberg Tampon Recycling@21:1/5 to All on Mon Nov 13 18:46:23 2023
    XPost: alt.energy.renewable, alt.politics.economics, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh XPost: talk.politics.guns, sac.politics, alt.business

    In article <uitgmr$mok7$11@dont-email.me>
    obama buttboy <elonx@protonmail.com> wrote:

    Although balance sheets remain solid, renewables companies have been
    writing down assets and cutting their earnings outlooks.

    Renewable energy firms are mostly suffering a dire earnings season
    as struggling supply chains, manufacturing faults and rising
    production costs eat into profits.

    With the world trying to transition at pace toward cleaner energy,
    equipment manufacturers are struggling to keep up with soaring
    global demand, leading to rising production costs and questions over
    the economic sustainability of large-scale projects from the
    industry’s major players.

    Manufacturing faults, most notably at Siemens Energy’s wind turbine subsidiary Siemens Gamesa, have emerged as companies race to build
    turbines at a greater pace and scale.

    The problems at Gamesa led Siemens Energy to scrap its profit
    forecast earlier this year, and last month the company sought
    guarantees of up to 15 billion euros ($16 billion) from the German
    government.

    Specialist wind energy firms are also often finding themselves
    outbid for seabed licenses by traditional oil and gas players.
    Should they win a contract, electricity prices are often too low to
    justify the manufacturing costs, leaving companies looking to their
    governments in Europe and the U.S. to deliver greater subsidies and
    restore balance to the market.

    As a result, most wind energy stocks are down sharply since the turn
    of the year.

    In a report published last week, Allianz Research noted that the
    eight largest renewable energy firms in the world reported a
    combined total $3 billion decrease in assets in the first half of
    the year, with wind projects in particular facing turbulent
    conditions. The firm’s economists said the past earnings season was
    a “learning moment” for the industry.

    “The whole sector is grappling with rising construction and
    financing costs, quality-control problems and supply-chain issues.
    Inflation and global energy-price fluctuations have also led to
    increased costs for wind-power projects, casting doubt over the
    feasibility of many ventures,” Allianz Research economists said.

    “Some projects in the U.S. but also in the U.K. are at risk of being abandoned if governments do not offer support. As these projects
    were initiated before the energy crisis, with guaranteed feed-in-
    tariffs that were low, they are now becoming more and more
    unprofitable.”

    Although balance sheets remain solid, renewables companies have been
    writing down assets and cutting their earnings outlooks. Danish
    company Ørsted announced last week that it was scrapping the
    development of two offshore projects in the U.S., with related
    impairments totaling $5.6 billion.

    However, compatriot Vestas offered a ray of hope. The company posted
    a third-quarter EBIT (earnings before interest and tax) before
    special items of 70 million euros ($74.73 million), well above the
    31 million euros projected in a company-compiled consensus. However,
    it also warned that external factors clouded its near-term outlook,
    pulling back its full-year investment and margin guidance.

    Its CEO Henrik Andersen told CNBC Wednesday that the sector was at
    an inflection point and that the market would eventually identify
    its “winners and losers” over time.

    “We are very disciplined, we work with our customers and partners
    can rely on us, and governments can rely on us. That, I hope,
    creates the strong foundation for being one of the winners in the
    industry,” Andersen said.

    “It’s not broken, but you can’t close your eyes and hope that any
    project you embark into discussions will always come through if the macroeconomic factors change.”

    Jacob Pedersen, senior analyst at Sydbank, agreed that Vestas in
    particular was well-positioned to move forward, but that both
    companies and policymakers needed to rethink their strategies if the
    transition to net zero was to be realistic.

    “We know a huge part of the problem is related to the projects that
    were won back in 2019/20 and at low prices. Since then, inflation
    and interests have gone up, it’s become much more expensive to
    realize these projects, and that has left an order book of deficits,
    and that order book is now being smaller and smaller as time goes
    by,” Pedersen told CNBC’s “Street Signs Europe” on Wednesday.

    Pedersen added that there is a “huge need for recalibration of the
    political vie” on the cost of the planned energy transition, given
    that wind turbines have increased in price by on average 20-30%
    since 2020.

    “The transition to wind turbines, to a greener energy portfolio
    around the world is getting more expensive, and as such, I think
    also we have seen some indications — we know that the U.S. is a huge
    problem for the offshore industry at the moment because of the rise
    in interest rates,” Pedersen explained.

    “But we have seen the newest projects being awarded on much, much
    better terms and terms that should be good for companies to generate
    a profit moving forward.”

    The European Commission announced a new Wind Power Action Plan last
    month, aimed at significantly increasing wind installed capacity.
    Pedersen said this was evidence that the necessary recalibration is
    underway, but that it would not be achieved overnight.

    “This is a process that takes time and in order for project
    developers to invest in new projects, in order for wind turbine
    producers to invest in the needed capacity to get us to where the
    politicians have their goals, much more is needed, and these
    companies simply haven’t got the cash to invest as much as is needed
    at the moment,” he said.

    https://www.nbcnews.com/science/environment/wind-power-industry- moment-reckoning-stocks-fall-earnings-crumble-rcna124882

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