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Hitachi grids will hit 2025 target after green revolution

Demand for wind and solar power growing because of pandemic, says CEO

- Reuters Zurich

The power grids business Hitachi bought from ABB for $11 billion is likely to hit the upper end of its 2025 targets despite the effects of a coronaviru­s downturn over the next two years, CEO Claudio Facchin has said.

Hitachi ABB Power Grids, whose products connect power stations to homes and factories, expects a recovery as countries launch stimulus packages and the electricit­y industry switches to greener technologi­es.

The company which competes with Siemens, General Electric and Hyundai, is due to give an update on its financial targets in October.

“We see the pandemic as having a temporary effect and we’re optimistic about the

Facchin told Reuters.

“COVID-19 has a negative impact on us in 2020 and 2021, but by 2023 and 2024 we should not see any more effect. We expect an actual positive swing when the recovery and stimulus packages kick in,” he said.

Although global electricit­y demand is set to fall 6 percent this year, demand for wind and solar is rising 5 percent, the Internatio­nal Energy Agency estimates.

“The pandemic has accelerate­d the conversion from fossil fuels to renewable sources of energy like wind and solar,” said Facchin, 55, who also led the business when ABB was its owner.

“We are helping customers master the additional complexity of variable renewable energy sources and combining informatio­n technology and operationa­l

future,”

technology to improve efficiency.” Projects at Zurich-based Hitachi ABB Power Grids, whose annual orders of $10 billion are equivalent to 10 percent of Hitachi’s revenue, include connecting the world’s largest offshore wind farm in the North Sea to Britain’s power grid.

In China it is delivering some of the world’s longest powerlines, including a 1,700 km link to transmit hydro-generated electricit­y from Sichuan province to Jiangxi province.

Facchin said he was confident the business could beat the 2 to 3 percent growth annual growth rate for the $100 billion global power grid market.

The company, which employs 36,000, will tap Hitachi’s expertise in IT and digital technology to enable predictive maintenanc­e of power grids, for example.

It will use Hitachi’s financing arm to help clients fund projects, and increase its service business, Facchin said.

The Italian executive was confident he could raise profitabil­ity, which investors saw as a problem when ABB owned it.

It is targeting operationa­l EBITA margins of 8 to 12 percent, up from 6.5 percent expected in the year to March 2021.

“We are going to be at the upper end of this corridor by 2025,” Facchin said.

 ?? Shuttersto­ck ?? The power grid business Hitachi bought is involved in projects like connecting the world’s largest offshore wind farm in the North Sea to Britain.
Shuttersto­ck The power grid business Hitachi bought is involved in projects like connecting the world’s largest offshore wind farm in the North Sea to Britain.

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