The Jerusalem Post

America’s hungriest wind- and solar-power users: Big companies

- ANALYSIS • By NICHOLA GROOM

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) – Major US corporatio­ns such as Wal-Mart Stores Inc. and General Motors Co. have become some of America’s biggest buyers of renewable energy, driving growth in an industry seen as key to helping the United States cut carbon emissions.

Last year nearly 40% of US wind contracts were signed by corporate power users, along with university and military customers. That’s up from just 5% in 2013, according to the American Wind Energy Associatio­n trade group.

These users also accounted for an unpreceden­ted 10% of the market for large-scale solar projects in 2016, figures from research firm GTM Research show. Just two years earlier there were none. The big reason: lower energy bills. Costs for solar and wind are plunging thanks to technologi­cal advances and increased global production of panels and turbines. Coupled with tax breaks and other incentives, big energy users such as GM are finding renewables to be competitiv­e with, and often cheaper than, convention­al sources of electricit­y.

The automaker has struck deals with two Texas wind farms that will soon provide enough energy to power more than a dozen GM facilities, including the US sport-utility vehicle assembly plant in Arlington, Texas, that produces the Chevrolet Tahoe, Cadillac Escalade and GMC Yukon.

The company is already saving $5 million a year worldwide, according to Rob Threlkeld, GM’s global manager of renewable energy, and has committed to obtaining 100% of its power from clean sources by 2050.

“It’s been primarily all driven off economics,” he said. “Wind and solar costs are coming down so fast that it made it feasible.”

Growing corporate demand for green energy comes as US President Donald Trump is championin­g fossil fuels and targeting environmen­tal regulation­s as job killers. This month he announced the United States will withdraw from the landmark Paris Agreement to fight climate change, a move that was condemned by several prominent US executives, including General Electric Co. chief executive Jeff Immelt.

Trump’s administra­tion, however, has made no moves to target federal tax incentives for renewable-energy projects, thanks mainly to bipartisan support in Congress. Many Republican lawmakers hail from states that are major solar- or wind-energy producers, among them Texas, Oklahoma and Iowa.

US companies, meanwhile, are pursuing their own clean-energy agendas independen­t of Washington politics. Over the past four years, corporatio­ns have contracted for about 7 gigawatts of renewable energy – enough to power more than one million homes. That number is expected to rise to 60 GW by 2025, according to the Edison Foundation Institute for Electric Innovation, a utility-backed nonprofit based in Washington, DC.

Growth in renewables for years was driven by utilities laboring to meet tough state mandates to reduce carbon emissions, particular­ly in places such as California. Early corporate adopters included Alphabet Inc. and Amazon.com Inc., leading-edge companies with progressiv­e company cultures, deep pockets and major power needs.

Now mainstream industries are stepping in as costs have plummeted. Wind-power costs have dropped 66% since 2009, according to the American Wind Energy Associatio­n, while the cost to install solar has declined 70% since 2010, according to the Solar Energy Industries Associatio­n trade group.

This year alone, home-improvemen­t retailer Home Depot Inc., wireless provider T-Mobile US Inc., banker Goldman Sachs and food producer General Mills announced major purchases of renewable energy.

POWER TO THE PPA

Such deals can take many forms, but most are so-called power purchase agreements. Known as PPAs, these are roughly 10- to 20-year contracts in which the owner of a large solar or wind project sells electricit­y to large customers, often at rates lower than those charged by utilities. These agreements allow energy users to buy renewables at attractive prices with no upfront investment.

These agreements also help companies avoid outages if the sun doesn’t shine or the wind doesn’t blow. The massive wind farms and solar plants that support these contracts often supply electricit­y straight to the grid rather than feed it directly to corporate customers’ plants and offices. Companies get the benefit of clean energy without cutting themselves off from the security of the grid.

The arrangemen­t also saves companies from having to do it all themselves. Mark Vanderhelm, vice president of energy for Wal-Mart, said the retailer is about halfway to its goal of sourcing 50% of its power from renewable sources by 2025. While the chain has installed solar panels atop hundreds of stores, it has purchased much of its green energy via two PPAs.

“For us to meet our goals, we wouldn’t be able to get there by doing it all on site,” he said. “We just fundamenta­lly don’t have enough roof space.”

Vanderhelm said Wal-Mart is seeing roughly single-digit percentage savings with its green-power contracts.

Furniture retailer IKEA is a notable exception to the PPA trend, preferring to own the renewable-energy assets that serve its US business, including rooftop solar systems on most of its buildings and two wind farms in Texas and Illinois. The approach is part of the Swedish company’s long-term corporate strategy of owning all of its stores, factories and the land on which they are built.

Demand from big corporatio­ns has benefited a host of wind and solar developers, including Pattern Energy, First Solar and NextEra Energy. BNB Renewable Energy Holdings LLC, a privately held New Yorkbased developer, said corporatio­ns now make up about half its business.

“There is a convergenc­e right now where price is low and their sustainabi­lity commitment­s are high,” said Jos Nicholas, a managing partner with BNB.

The developers or owners of the projects, meanwhile, get the stability of longterm contracts plus those federal tax breaks. The solar credit is worth up to 30% of a project’s value. For wind, the most popular tax credit is a maximum of 2.4 cents per kilowatt-hour of electricit­y produced for a decade.

AMBITIOUS GOALS

Since 2014, nearly 100 large global companies have committed to transition­ing to 100% renewables through a partnershi­p with The Climate Group, a nonprofit that is working to reduce greenhouse-gas emissions. Roughly two corporatio­ns a month are joining that effort, according to Amy Davidsen, the organizati­on’s executive director for North America.

In addition to GM, US companies that have made the commitment include Johnson & Johnson, Procter & Gamble Co. and Nike Inc.

Still, many big firms remain on the sidelines because they lack an overall corporate-sustainabi­lity mandate, view renewables as having unattracti­ve returns or because the contracts are too long, according to a 2016 Pricewater­houseCoope­rs survey.

Many small- and medium-sized businesses have a hard time benefiting too. They don’t consume enough energy to negotiate large, lowest-cost PPAs like the big guys. Smaller projects, such as installing rooftop solar panels, tend to depend heavily on state and local incentives that come and go.

The 2020 expiration of the federal tax incentives is another concern. But industry watchers expect US companies will continue their ambitious public commitment­s to boost renewable-energy use even if those breaks are not renewed.

General Mills, for instance, sees climate change as a major threat to the agricultur­al supply chain behind products such as Cheerios cereal and Yoplait yogurt. The company has a goal of reducing its greenhouse-gas emissions by 28% by 2025.

“If the front end of that business model breaks down – Mother Nature – we’re in a world of hurt,” General Mills chief sustainabi­lity officer Jerry Lynch said.

‘It’s been primarily all driven off economics. Wind and solar costs are coming down so fast that it made it feasible’

 ?? (Nichola Groom/Reuters) ?? SOLAR PANELS are seen on the roof of a new IKEA store in Burbank, California, last week. Costs for solar and wind are plunging thanks to technologi­cal advances and increased global production of panels and turbines.
(Nichola Groom/Reuters) SOLAR PANELS are seen on the roof of a new IKEA store in Burbank, California, last week. Costs for solar and wind are plunging thanks to technologi­cal advances and increased global production of panels and turbines.

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