Otago Daily Times

SolarZero sold to US subject to OIO approval

- CHRIS KEALL

NEW Zealand company solarZero, a firm that installs home solar power for no money upfront, has sold to United States giant BlackRock.

The deal is subject to Overseas Investment Office approval.

It is understood the purchase price, which has not been disclosed, is close to the OIO’s $100 million threshold.

Charlie Reid, the cohead of BlackRock’s AsiaPacifi­c Climate Infrastruc­ture unit, said that on top of the purchase price, his firm would invest about $100 million over the next three years — and up to $1 billion over the next seven to 10 — to accelerate solarZero’s expansion in New Zealand plus possible expansion across the Tasman and around AsiaPacifi­c over the next three years.

SolarZero offers nomoneyupf­ront solar installati­ons, in part bankrolled by a Crown agency. That is a key selling point given an installati­on can cost $25,000 or more. Instead, a household pays a fixed monthly fee for 20 years, Ecotricity and other grid power companies providing topups where necessary at capped rates.

Under its monthly fee setup the firm retains ownership of the rooftop panels, Panasonic batteries, and smart management systems installed at a customer’s property. It provides realtime monitoring and maintenanc­e. And helps consumers to trade on energy markets if they have surplus power to sell back to the grid.

SolarZero claims its ‘‘Netflix for your roof’’ subscripti­on approach will save the average home $230 per month on its power bill.

Some 9000 households are on board and working with 45 installati­on companies — solarZero says it is adding customers at the rate of one every 35 minutes. It claims 40% market share.

The firm was founded in 2008 by Andrew Booth, who had been involved in the industry since the 1970s, originally from a base in Christchur­ch.

Mr Booth tapped Sir Stephen

Tindall for funds to roll up three solar firms into a nationwide operation (previously known as SolarCity).

Six years later, Wellington’s Pencarrow Private Equity came on board as solarZero’s second major investor (before the BlackRock deal, Pencarrow was solarZero’s largest single shareholde­r, with a 37% stake, followed by Sir Stephen’s K1W1 on 19% and Mr Booth on 5%.

Pencarrow was also a backer of Christchur­ch geologic software company Seequent, sold to Nasdaqlist­ed Bentley Systems in a $1.45 billion deal last year).

SolarZero has also received backing from two Crown agencies.

One is the Energy Efficiency and Conservati­on Authority (EECA), which chipped in a modest $33,500 to help the firm develop technology for smart EV charging.

The other is NZ Green Investment Finance (NZ GIF), created by the Government in 2019 to help fund initiative­s that support New Zealand’s goal of transition­ing to a netzeroemi­ssions economy by 2050.

Last November, NZ GIF provided solarZero with a $40 million debt facility to fund commercial­scale solar installati­ons, which came on top of an earlier $10 million facility for financing residentia­l solar.

The NZ GIF credit line completes a debt facility from Westpac. The bank won the Business Institutio­nal Banking Innovation category at the INFINZ Awards 2016 for its work with solarZero (then still branded SolarCity) developing the country’s first solar services facility.

NZ GIF said its debt facility would help solarZero to install solar systems in enough homes to provide the virtual equivalent of a 40MW power station. For context, Mercury this week said it planned to build a $115 million, 43MW wind farm at Kaiwera Downs, south of Gore, that it said would be able to power 20,000 or 66,000 electric vehicles.

Booth said the terms of the debt facility would carry over to the new owner.

While there are no direct subsidies or incentives for solar power in New Zealand, NZ GIF’s funding allowed solarZero to expand its zeroupfron­t deal at a time when national grid operator Transpower is predicting 700% growth in distribute­d solar generation by 2030 (albeit off a low base of under 1% today).

Longer trends are hard to pick in the rapidly developing green energy market. Transpower has modelled several scenarios. The most solarfrien­dly sees 70% of New Zealand’s 1.8 million homes and 40% of the 300,000 businesses running on solar by 2050.

NZ GIF chief executive Craig Weise said the Crown agency’s $50 million in financing would help solarZero and its peers create 175 jobs, and increase the potential of solarZero’s ‘‘virtual power station’’ of solarpower­ed homes to help out Transpower during times the national grid is under a squeeze.

In April last year, as NZ GIF made its initial $10 million in funding available, Weise said solarZero had 3500 smart batteries from its ‘‘GridforGoo­d’’ fleet enrolled in Transpower’s demand response programme, providing a potential 10MW of power for the short term.

The credit line provided by his agency would help expand that.

Assuming the OIO greenlight­s the deal — as it has for a string of techs sold offshore since the Covid outbreak — will Mr Booth sail off into the sunset?

The founder, now 62, said he was staying on, and not for an earnout payment after two years if targets were met (the carrot that is usually dangled to keep a founder around for a period). ‘‘There’s no earnout,’’ he said. ‘‘We’ve got seven years to stop the worst impacts of climate change. And I’ve got grandchild­ren, so I intend to do everything I can to make sure that we get to that 100% renewable target. So I’m staying around — even though I’m an old bugger.’’

Today, solarZero has 120 staff and works with 45 installers.

Mr Reid said BlackRock would invest $100 million over the next three years — and possibly up to $1 billion over the next seven to 10 years — to speed the growth of solarZero’s business in New Zealand, developmen­t of its battery management technology and expansion offshore.

BlackRock — the world’s largest private fund manager — bought solarZero through its $US60 billion ($NZ100 billion) Real Assets fund.

‘‘Our investors are longterm institutio­nal capital; pension funds and insurers, and they’re looking for two things,’’ Mr Reid said.

‘‘Firstly, they’re looking for attractive financial investment­s. Secondly they’re looking for investment­s that will have a positive impact.

‘‘And if you look at solarZero’s business model, it gives people the opportunit­y to reduce their carbon footprint and enables them to reduce their electricit­y bills at time of escalating prices. And the technology itself helps support the grid during a time of rapid transition.’’

Mr Reid adds, ‘‘New Zealand is widely recognised as a global leader in renewable energy and climate finance, and we are pleased to make our first investment in this market. Our move into NZ demonstrat­es BlackRock’s commitment to invest in attractive markets as part of our broader efforts to offer a flow of addressabl­e global climate investment opportunit­ies for our clients. solarZero is a global pioneer.’’

(Although solarZero is BlackRock’s first green investment here, another firm in its environmen­tal portfolio, Australia’s Jolt, has just expanded into New Zealand with its rollout of 500 ‘‘freemium’’ EV chargers that give your electric car a halfhour’s worth of adfunded fastchargi­ng.)

‘‘We’ll be keeping the same team on the ground in New Zealand,’’ Reid says.

‘‘The incrementa­l funding I would hope will enable them to go faster to reach scale and expand internatio­nally. We’ve invested in a range of portfolio companies specifical­ly across this region in Korea, Taiwan, Japan and Australia — and solarZero will get access to that network to help with knowledge sharing and access to those markets.’’ —

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 ?? PHOTOS: KERRIE WATERWORTH ?? Early days . . . One of the first solarZero installati­ons on a house in Wanaka last year.
PHOTOS: KERRIE WATERWORTH Early days . . . One of the first solarZero installati­ons on a house in Wanaka last year.
 ?? ?? The virtual power plant solarZero battery. . . . The Panasonic smart
The virtual power plant solarZero battery. . . . The Panasonic smart
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