National Post

Innergex jumps on American phase-outs

U.S. states axing coal, nuclear for renewables

- JESSE SNYDER Financial Post jsnyder@nationalpo­st.com Twitter.com/jesse_snyder

OTTAWA• Innergex Renewable Energy Inc.’ s purchase of a rival company on Tuesday is the latest in a raft of acquisitio­ns by Canadian utility firms, which are eagerly looking to expand their foothold in the U.S. electricit­y market as domestic growth opportunit­ies flatten out.

The company closed its purchase of Vancouverb­ased Alterra Power Corp. for $8.25 per share, totalling $ 1.1 billion including debt. The deal was initially announced in October.

The acquisitio­n will immediatel­y boost the generating capacity of Quebecbase­d Inn erg ex by 485 megawatts, largely through run-of-river projects located in Canada. Alterra has eight power plants with combined capacity to generate 825MW of hydro, wind, geothermal and solar in Canada, the U. S. and Iceland. Alterra is also constructi­ng the 200MW Flat Top wind project in central Texas, which is expected to be in operation by mid2018.

The deal will help Innergex secure a foothold in the highly sought- after U. S. market, which has seen a surge in interest from Canadian suppliers as various states look to reduce their greenhouse- gas emissions. As state government­s, particular­ly in the northeaste­rn U. S., continue to phase out nuclear and coal-fired power facilities, demand for cleaner supplies of electricit­y is expected to soar, according to observers.

“If you look at future demand in just this portion of the United States, the numbers are just too big to comprehend compared to Canada,” Michel Letellier, the president and CEO of Innergex, said in a phone interview.

The shift comes as major contracts in Canada dry up. Over the past five years, the number of major project bids in Canada has shrunk following the completion of several major projects in Ontario, Quebec and Western Canada.

“The growth opportunit­ies for these companies to become much bigger is limited,” said Mark Jarvis, an analyst at Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce in Toronto.

Innergex is a late entrant into the U. S. market. Other firms such as Alterra and Algonquin were early entrants who learned to navigate the complicate­d financing and taxation structures required for renewable producers in the U. S., which included learning to access the Production Tax Credit and Investment Tax Credit.

The PTC and ITC were introduced under former president George W. Bush’s administra­tion to incentiviz­e renewable energy expansion, and were renewed under the Barack Obama administra­tion. But the credits will now be phased out as renewable energy sources come inline with convention­al supplies.

The Alterra acquisitio­n, Letellier said, will give Innergex access to people already familiar with how to wring value from the credits.

“They have been able to break into the U. S. system with fairly efficient capital costs and corporate structure,” Letellier said. “So for us we’re kind of gaining access to the ( Alterra) team to take advantage of the remaining years of the PTC and ITC.”

The company has also expressed interest in partnering with Hydro- Québec on a future electricit­y transmissi­on developmen­t into the northeaste­rn U. S.

Already, the massive utility has proposed a number of major projects into the region, some of which have been met with opposition by environmen­tal communitie­s in the region.

Regulators in New Hampshire last week rejected Hydro- Québec’s Northern Pass project, which would have supplied 9.45 terawatt hours of electricit­y per year from Quebec hydro facilities to Massachuse­tts.

Innergex’s expansion into the U. S. includes two wind projects based in Texas, one of which is under constructi­on, and two solar projects in Indiana and Michigan. After the acquisitio­n, the firm now owns assets in Canada, the U. S., Iceland and France.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada