Sustainability, Clean Energy, Recycling & ESG

More Woes For Wind

May 3, 2022 1:20:32 PM / by Graham Copley posted in ESG, Hydrogen, Wind Power, Climate Change, Sustainability, CCS, Renewable Power, Inflation, Supply Chain, wind, Westlake, renewable, Vestas, Williams, low carbon power

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We discussed the woes of the wind power industry at length in a dedicated ESG and Climate piece last week, and the Vestas results below play into the same theme. The company is cutting guidance again for 2022, which is already much lower than estimates would have suggested 6 months ago. While Siemens Gamesa has the added headache of a mismanaged platform change, all of the issues raised by Vestas are shared industry wide, delayed installations because of supply chain issues and material shortages, as well as significant cost inflation. In tomorrow’s ESG and Climate report we discuss some of the increases in European PPAs in 1Q 2022, reversing a multi-year trend of lower installed costs of power. This reversal will likely impact plans for 2022 and 2023, especially for those banking on lower power costs to justify many of the announced hydrogen ventures – particularly in Europe. Those who press ahead despite higher power costs and higher construction costs in general, may stretch both balance sheets and borrowing capacity.

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Strong Challenge In Canada And Collaboration In Germany

Mar 31, 2022 2:27:55 PM / by Graham Copley posted in ESG, Hydrogen, Carbon Capture, Climate Change, Sustainability, Green Hydrogen, CCS, Renewable Power, Emissions, BASF, renewables, EV, materials, Shortage, Canada, renewable, materials costs, Germany, Henkel, GHG

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The Canadian targets highlighted below are ambitious and will likely not happen without the significant CCS projects planned for Alberta. The CCS opportunity will drive down energy and chemical (heavy industry) based emissions meaningfully and could also be the basis for new power generation capacity to allow the transport industry reductions that the country is looking for – either through EVs or hydrogen-based transport.

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CCS Wont Work Without Policy And Neither Will Energy Conservation

Mar 22, 2022 12:48:43 PM / by Graham Copley posted in ESG, Carbon Capture, Climate Change, Sustainability, CCS, CO2, Energy, Emissions, IEA, Oil, natural gas, clean energy, renewable, fossil fuels, renewable capacity, EPA

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One of the subjects that we will cover at length in the ESG and Climate report tomorrow (to be found here) is the significant need for CCS globally, but especially in the US, as we see more balanced forecasts of energy supply emerging which show more use of fossil fuels for longer – especially, but not limited to natural gas. These forecasts recognize the current energy momentum as well as some of the more practical realities around the rate of construction of renewable capacity relative to energy demand growth. The CCS plans that are appearing all over the place are nothing more than plans right now and if the EPA permit activity is a true barometer – not much has moved beyond planning. This needs to change and we likely need both an increase in CCS incentives – which could take many forms – as well as some streamlining around the permitting process. Simply waiting and hoping for a renewable miracle is not going to work – nor is some sort of CCS cost breakthrough.

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