Vestas leaps to top spot
in U.S. wind market
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[February 10, 2017]
By Jacob Gronholt-Pedersen
COPENHAGEN
(Reuters) - Danish wind turbine maker Vestas Wind Systems has leapt to
the top of the U.S. wind market, overtaking General Electric in new
capacity installed last year, although slower demand growth and doubts
over political support could threaten its position.
Vestas came back from the brink of bankruptcy just four years ago. Now
the wind industry is entering a new phase with slower growth and more
steady demand for turbines, prompting producers to turn to servicing and
replacement of older turbines to grow revenue.
Vestas, the world's biggest wind turbine maker, supplied 43 percent of
the 8.2 GW of wind power capacity connected to the U.S. power grid last
year, the American Wind Energy Association said in a quarterly report.
That was up from 33 percent in 2015 and just 12 percent in 2014.
By contrast, General Electric's market share stood at 42 percent in
2016, down from well over half in 2014, the association said, although
GE remains the market leader in terms of overall installed capacity in
the United States.
"It is definitely our ambition to at least keep our market share,"
Vestas Chief Executive Anders Runevad said in an interview.
Wind energy has surpassed hydropower as the biggest source of renewable
electricity in the United States, according to the association, helped
by tax credits under Barack Obama's administration.
Vestas reported record global revenues for 2016 on Wednesday but warned
of lower orders in the United States this year, saying rapid growth in
demand in the industry generally could be coming to an end as the wind
market matures.
The Danish company is set to lose its status as the world's top wind
turbine maker after Germany's Siemens and Spain's Gamesa agreed to
combine their assets in the sector.
Both GE and Siemens depend on orders from a few large customers such as
NextEra Energy, while Vestas supplies a broader range.
"They've been very aggressive and maintained a diverse order book," said
Luke Lewandowski, research manager at MAKE, a consultancy.
Numbers from MAKE, which include grid-connected turbines from wind farm
projects that are not yet fully completed, show that GE held 42 percent
of the market last year with Vestas second at 41 percent.
In June, Vestas secured a significant order for 1,000 wind turbines from
MidAmerican Energy, a Berkshire Hathaway subsidiary which had until then
been a Siemens client.
"Vestas has been really flexible in thinking and adapting themselves to
the wishes of the clients in terms of location, type of turbines and the
services around it," said Danny van Doesburg, senior portfolio manager
at APG Asset Management, the seventh biggest shareholder in Vestas.
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Maintenance work is done on a Vestas wind turbine (R) at a wind
energy park near Heide, Germany, September 9, 2010.
REUTERS/Christian Charisius/File Photo
"We
have widened the customer base quite substantially in the United States,"
Runevad said. "We have managed to penetrate further into the big U.S.-based
utilities."
Still, risks remain for the the world's biggest wind turbine maker, which
supplies the U.S. market from four factories in Colorado.
Vestas was one of the hardest hit European stocks, plunging as much as 10
percent, after Trump's election pointed to an uncertain future for the U.S. wind
market, the company's largest.
After a record year in 2016, Vestas warned on Wednesday of lower order intake in
the United States this year and said rapid growth in demand could be coming to
an end, noting "signs of increased maturity of the wind market."
Vestas
said that the Production Tax Credit (PTC), which was extended for five years in
December 2015, could hit its U.S. business in the near term as it gives
investors more time to build their wind farm projects, reducing pressure to get
projects built next year.
Tax credits that are already awarded seem safe, but there is now more
uncertainty about future government support.
"How (the U.S. market) will pan out over the years is still very hard to
predict," Runevad said. He seeks to position Vestas for high growth in the
service segment, which grew by 15 percent last year, helped by the acquisition
of two service providers.
As the industry matures, more turbines need servicing, upgrading and eventually
replacement. MAKE forecasts the global service segment to grow by 9 to 10
percent per year on average over the next ten years.
"The whole service element of the wind industry can be a potential trigger for
the investment case," said APG's van Doesburg.
(Reporting by Jacob Gronholt-Pedersen; Editing by Susan Fenton/Ruth Pitchford)
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