Germany’s largest power producer RWE plans to spend part of its €7 billion war chest on growing its 24.7-gigawatt (GW) pipeline of renewables projects, its CFO has said, just weeks after fossil fuel major BP announced a major low-carbon push.
“A pipeline needs to be worked on constantly. It doesn’t grow overnight,” Dr Markus Krebber told Reuters Newsagency, less than a day after the group raised €2 billion in a share sale to fund growth.
Unfazed by the COVID-19 crisis, Dr Krebber said that the environment for renewables had improved in the course of the year, adding RWE would be able to realise more of its current pipeline of projects than previously thought.
He said the company, Europe’s third-largest renewables player, would expand that offering through smaller deals, below the 2.7GW it recently bought from wind turbine maker Nordex for €402.5 million.
“We’re not interested in taking over operating assets on a large scale. Our business model is to develop, build and operate,” Dr Krebber said.
The share sale proceeds come on top of a separate €5 billion spending plan by the end of 2022, intended to grow RWE’s installed renewable capacity to beyond 13GW from around nine gigawatts now.
“We won’t be able to spend it all until the end of 2022 because realising projects needs time,” Dr Krebber said.
RWE would give new growth targets in the second half of 2021, he said.
The company wants to expand in North America and Europe, where Dr Krebber aims to add more solar and offshore wind projects to further bolster its renewables position, which was boosted by a major asset swap with peer E.ON.
He also said that funds were required for upcoming renewable energy auctions in Britain, France, Denmark, Germany and North America, at which project developers have to make competing bids for capacity.
Dr Krebber’s comments highlight the ongoing race for renewable assets, where utilities, most notably Italy’s Enel, Spain’s Iberdrola and Denmark’s Orsted, face increasing competition from big oil.
“There’s a scarcity of offshore wind projects,” said Dr Thomas Deser, fund manager at Union Investment, a top-20 shareholder of RWE.
“This could even intensify as oil majors such as BP are entering the renewables sector.”
BP earlier this month unveiled plans to expand its renewable power generation to 50GW by 2030, compared with 2.5GW now, and said it would increase its low-carbon spending to US$5 billion a year by the same point.
“It is difficult to imagine that BP can reach this level without takeovers,” Dr Deser said.
Union Investment is also a top-30 shareholder in BP.
RWE has been called a takeover target by Goldman Sachs.
With a market valuation of €20 billion, it is cheaper than Enel or Iberdrola but still a heavyweight compared with Britain’s SSE or Portugal’s EDP Renovaveis.
“I’m not worried about the growing competition. If others want to join in, it’s proof that our sector is attractive,” Dr Krebber, who will take over as RWE’s chief executive next year, said.
The growing interest is also expected to drive up prices for project pipelines, already reflected in the share prices of smaller players, including Encavis, PNE AG and Energiekontor.
All have risen between 24 per cent and 49 per cent in the year to date.
EcoNews is an independent publication that relies on contributions from its readers.
WE’RE BUILDING A PLATFORM WITH A CLEAR FOCUS ON THE ENVIRONMENT, CULTURAL AND SOCIAL GOOD. CONTRIBUTE AND TOGETHER WE CAN MAKE AN IMPACT.
If you value EcoNews, but are unable to contribute via sponsorship or advertising we ask that you promote our online store The Native Shop – www.nativeshop.com.au via your social media to assist us to fund this valuable service.





