Clean energy investment breaks the $100bn barrier in 2007
Press Release – for immediate use
02 January 2008 The clean energy sector powered ahead in 2007, according to analysts New Energy
Finance. In spite of difficult conditions on the credit markets, the amount of new money
invested in the sector grew to $117.2bn, up 41% from 2006’s $83.0bn*, and more than
$20bn ahead of predictions.
The clean energy sector weathered last summer’s credit crunch well, partly because nonfinancial
drivers such as regulation, political will and fears over energy supplies remain strong. It
was also helped by a shift in focus from more mature wind and biofuels markets in Western
Europe and the US towards Asia, Brazil and other developing countries. Wind power continued
to lead the way, but the year also saw strong growth in solar power and energy efficiency.
Investments in biofuels fell back from 2006’s record year, hampered by surging feedstock costs.
• The biggest portion of investment funds went to asset financing, up 40% on 2006, at
$54.5bn.
• The highest growth rate was in public markets, where investment was 80% higher than
in 2006, at $18.9bn, the biggest portion being the $6.6bn flotation of Iberdrola
Renovables (Iberenova). If this IPO is excluded, public market new investment grew by
a more sedate 17%.
• Venture capital and private equity new investment grew by 27% to $8.5bn. Investors
retreated from later stage investments and returned to early stage deals, as their
familiarity with the sector and technologies grew and the pipeline of commercialisationready
opportunities dried up.
• The year was marked by the launch of clean energy funds by several high street asset
management companies, including HSBC, F&C, Schroeders, Virgin and DWS.
Michael Liebreich, Chairman and CEO of New Energy Finance commented: “At the start of
2007 we said that the clean energy industry had to deliver clean, cost-effective power and fuels
in large volume in order to justify investors’ enthusiasm. That remains just as true today:
investors’ enthusiasm still outstrips the industry’s current contribution to solving the world’s
environmental and energy security problems. However, progress is being made on scaling up a
number of sectors, particularly wind, solar, biomass and energy efficiency. The wave of liquidity
washing through the sector shows no signs of abating and, despite the dark clouds still massed
over the world’s credit markets, 2008 looks set to be another banner year “.
Asset financing
Clean energy asset financing was resilient in 2007 in the face of turmoil on the world’s debt
markets, with a record $54.5bn invested. Investors were forced to shift their emphasis from
project finance deals to on-balance-sheet financings, which made up 64% of total asset
financing activity, up from 44% in 2006. Much of this came from the South American biofuels
industry and wind, biomass and waste-to-energy deals in China.
Wind investment accounted for nearly half of the total new investment in projects, or $24.8bn.
Much of the growth in wind investment in 2007 took place in Asia and Oceania, whose $8.4bn
of deals outstripped the Americas ($6.6bn) while investment in the EMEA region grew to $9.8bn
after falling by $1.5bn in 2006. The remaining $29.7bn investment was largely in biofuels
projects ($14.5bn); biomass & waste ($7.1bn); and solar ($5.9bn).
The 30% increase in investment in biofuel assets contrasted with 2006’s 171% growth, which
was driven by the US’s love affair with corn-based ethanol. In 2007, much of the activity took
place in South America, chiefly in Brazil, while the US ethanol industry stalled under difficult
market conditions, with many producers shelving plans for capacity expansion. The ratification
in December of the US energy bill, with its ambitious renewable fuels standard that calls for
* Note: The previously reported figures of $71bn to $75bn for 2006 excluded certain categories of investment such as
solar water heating, which are now included – hence the restated 2006 figure of $83.0bn.
36bn gallons of alternative fuels by 2022, should considerably improve the outlook for US
ethanol. New investment in biomass & waste grew by 51% from $4.7bn in 2006. As with wind,
most of the surge took place in China, where the government has great hopes for biomass.
Solar project investment of $5.9bn was 82% higher than 2006, as Spain and Italy continued
their drive for larger photovoltaic projects. Spain has seen a great rush as investors tried to
pushed their projects to qualify for the a 400MW subsidy cap. Greece and France are largely
markets-in-waiting, constrained by bureaucracy and the lack of mature building-integrated
photovoltaic products.
Public markets
In 2007, $18.9bn of new money was raised by clean energy companies on the public markets,
up 80% from $10.5bn last year. Much of the increase was driven by one deal: the landmark
flotation of Iberdrola Renovables, which raised $6.6bn, six times more than the previous record
deal, REC of Norway’s $1.1bn IPO last May. Although the IPO was priced at the bottom end of
its lead coordinators’ price range at €5.30 per share, it represented a hefty market capitalisation
of €22.4bn ($33bn) at the start of trading on 13 December.
Solar companies raised $5.8bn of new equity on the public markets during 2007, once again
chiefly Chinese cell and module makers listing on US markets. Biofuels groups managed to
raise $1.0bn, almost $2bn less than in 2006, and energy efficiency groups caused excitement,
by raising $0.8bn, led by EnerNOC and Comverge, as policy makers and investors realised the
potential of the sector.
The WilderHill New Energy Global Innovation Index (NEX), which tracks the fortunes of 88 clean
energy companies worldwide, rose nearly 60% in 2007, taking its increase over the past two
years to over 110%.
Venture Capital / Private Equity
In 2007, venture capital and private equity investment increased to $8.5bn, up 27% from 2006.
Early-stage VC made strong gains, increasing to $1.8bn from $0.8bn in 2006 as investors found
it harder to find value in later stage deals due to greater competition and were driven to make
earlier-stage bets. Late stage VC was the only investment stage to attract less money than last
year, falling by a little over $100m to $1.1bn. Solar became the leading sector for VC and PE,
attracting $3.0bn of new equity, and biofuels decreased slightly on last year to $2.0bn. The two
other leading sectors were wind ($1.8bn) and energy efficiency companies ($1.2bn).
Much of the increase in solar investment was down to young US solar companies attracting
early-stage VC investment. In 2006, just $181m was invested in such firms, in 2007 this
increased to $702m. In Europe, where the solar industry is more mature, a meagre $59m of
early-stage VC found its way to solar companies. Some of bigger solar investments worldwide
were in thin-film technology, which offers a way around the currently limited supply of solar
silicon. HelioVolt raised $101m, while Solyndra raised $80m and SoloPower attracted $30m.
Solar installation companies also featured prominently, pushed into the spotlight by Arnold
Schwarzenegger’s California Solar Initiative. Early stage venture investment in energy efficiency
companies more than doubled in both North America and Europe, to $316m and $96m
respectively.
ABOUT NEW ENERGY FINANCE
New Energy Finance is the world’s leading independent provider of research to investors in
renewable energy, biofuels, low-carbon technologies and the carbon markets. The company’s
research staff of 60 (based in London, Washington, New York, Palo Alto, Beijing, New Delhi, Tel
Aviv, Cape Town, San Paulo and Perth) tracks deal flow in venture capital, private equity, M&A,
public markets, asset finance and carbon credits around the world.
The New Energy Finance Desktop is the world’s most comprehensive subscription database of
investors and investments in clean energy. New Energy Finance’s Insight Services provide
deep market analysis to investors in Wind, Solar, Biofuels, Biomass, China, VC/PE, Public
Markets and the US. New Energy Finance is co-publisher of the world’s first global stock-market
index of quoted clean energy companies, the WilderHill New Energy Global Innovation Index
(ticker symbol NEX). The company also undertakes bespoke research and consultancy, and
runs senior-level networking events.
New Carbon Finance, a division of New Energy Finance, is the world’s leading independent
provider of analysis, price forecasting, consultancy and risk management services relating to
carbon. It has dedicated services for each of the major emerging carbon markets: European,
global (Kyoto) and US, where it covers the planned regional markets as well as potential federal
initiatives.
Michael Liebreich, Chairman & CEO
New Energy Finance Limited
New Penderel House
283-288 High Holborn
London WC1V 7HP
tel: +44 20 7092 8800
email: michael.liebreich@newenergyfinance.com
For more information on New Energy Finance: www.newenergyfinance.com
For more information on New Carbon Finance: www.newcarbonfinance.com
For more information on the NEX clean energy market index: www.nexindex.com
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment