General Electric's power unit fights for growth as wind,
solar gain
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[May 24, 2018]
By Alwyn Scott
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Vistra Energy Corp and
Dominion Energy Inc – which serve about 5.5 million electricity
customers in more than a dozen U.S. states – both say they are done
building combined-cycle natural gas-fired power plants.
Instead, they are building large solar plants, which offer plentiful and
inexpensive electricity.
This bearish view of fossil-fuel energy, reflective of a growing
acceptance by utilities of renewable power sources, poses a hurdle to
John Flannery's plan to turn around General Electric Co's <GE.N> $35
billion-a-year power unit.
GE's chief executive spelled out the difficulty on Wednesday. Power
profits will be flat this year after falling 53 percent in 2017, he
said, and GE is planning that demand for heavy-duty natural gas power
plants will be less than half what it forecast just over a year ago, and
will stay at that level through 2020.
New plant sales are "going to be tough," Flannery said at an investor
conference on Wednesday. "This is not going to be a quick fix, but there
is, at the end of the day, long-life assets here with intrinsic economic
value. We're going to make the most of what we have there."
In the long run, Flannery and Russell Stokes, the head of GE Power, have
said demand for electricity and natural gas power generators will grow
about 2 percent a year - in line with global forecasts - as utilities
make a gradual transition to renewable power.
Following a strategy he laid out in November, Flannery is cutting 12,000
jobs and $2.5 billion in costs at the unit. On Wednesday, he said GE has
tripled some sales incentives in the power division and is competing
aggressively for new contracts to maintain plants and to get the call
when utilities need parts or repairs during an unexpected outage,
something of which GE had lost sight.
But some analysts and investors are skeptical about the long-term
prospects of a business devoted to natural gas and coal power plants
that are falling out of favor with utilities.
The competition from solar and wind, along with abundant low-priced gas
produced by fracking, is curbing orders for new plants and forcing the
closure of old ones. Some utilities are even filing for bankruptcy.
"That means companies are going to have trouble selling new fossil-fuel
plants," said Mark Dyson, a principal at the Rocky Mountain Institute,
an organization that researches the power industry.
Over 126 years, GE has weathered ups and downs in power market before,
and has legions of sales and service people around the world. Last year
it booked 26 orders for its newest gas turbines in Mexico, Bangladesh
and elsewhere. It is investing in its separate, $10 billion-a-year
renewables unit focused on wind and hydro, which saw revenue fall 6
percent last year. GE also sells battery storage, software and
smart-grid technology to work with wind and solar systems.
GE power equipment orders - an indicator of future sales - fell 41
percent in the first quarter, accelerating from a 17 percent drop last
year, according to GE's earnings reports.
GE's performance reflects the broader trend of utilities shifting to
renewables from fossil fuels.
Global sales of large natural gas power plants have fallen by half since
2013, according to McCoy Power Reports. Coal and gas-fired plants
accounted for just 38 percent of new electricity capacity financed
globally last year, down from 71 percent a decade ago, according to
Thomson Reuters data. Solar and wind now draw 53 percent of such
investment, up from 22 percent, a Reuters analysis shows.
For a graphic, click https://tmsnrt.rs/2I7QAxf
Rivals Siemens AG <SIEGn.DE> and Mitsubishi Heavy Industries <7011.T>
are cautious about the scope for growth.
"We see a structural change," Lisa Davis, the chief executive officer of
Siemens Corp, the U.S. unit, said in an interview. "There are fewer
large units being sold globally than there were five years ago. I don't
see that changing dramatically going forward."
Siemens is cutting 6,100 power and gas jobs to adjust.
Many utilities share the view that the shift is permanent because it is
driven by economics rather than government policy and climate-change
concerns. While conventional power plants will continue to be built,
sales may never reach the levels seen just two years ago, industry
experts said.
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A wind turbine is pictured at a Duke Energy wind energy farm in
Notrees, Texas, U.S. April 5, 2018. Picture taken April 5, 2018.
REUTERS/Joe White
With electricity prices trending downward, utilities are increasingly unwilling
to risk capital on a new plant unless then can lock in a long-term price,
executives said.
"Building new large, combined-cycle gas plants is challenging without the
stability of a long-term power contract," said Timothy Menzie, chief executive
officer of InterGen, an international power generation company.
POWER PLAYER
GE faces a further challenge: long-term erosion of the large base of plants it
services. After acquiring the Alstom power business in 2015, GE has a base of
customers that produces one-third of the world's electricity. Long-term
contracts to service those plants bring GE billions of dollars in annual
revenue.
But as utilities close older coal and gas-fired plants, the revenue growth from
services is under pressure.
Wind and solar can cost as little as $18 a megawatt hour, compared with $40 for
a large gas plant, said Mikael Backman, North America regional director at
Wartsila <WRT1V.HE> Energy Solutions, part of the Finnish company that makes
quick-start natural gas-fired generators.
Across much of the United States, some utilities now buy all the cheap renewable
power they can on electricity markets and use quick-start gas engines to fill in
when wind and sun falter.
In California, regulators have put on hold a project that planned to buy one of
GE's large natural-gas turbines while Southern California Edison, which planned
to buy the power, studies using wind and solar instead.
The shift from fossil fuels stretches beyond states like California, which is
aggressively switching to renewable power.
In oil-rich Texas, wind and solar now provide 21 percent of the state's
electricity. Utilities there are shutting down the equivalent of about 20
average-sized coal plants this year, according a Reuters analysis of data from
power system operator ERCOT. Out of 183 power-generation projects on the drawing
boards, only four would run on fossil fuels, ERCOT said. The rest are wind and
solar.
ExGen Texas Power, an affiliate of Exelon Corp <EXC.N>, filed for bankruptcy
protection in November for five natural-gas plants, the second such bankruptcy
in Texas last year attributed to low power prices. GE supplied parts and service
to several of the plants, according to the bankruptcy filings. Reuters could not
determine whether the contracts will remain in effect.
In Virginia, Dominion Energy ended several maintenance contracts it had with GE
this year when it mothballed a large gas-fired plant built by companies GE later
acquired and idled seven other coal and natural gas units in the state.
Dominion aims to build 4,720 megawatts of solar by 2033, the equivalent of about
five large combined-cycle power plants.
It is opening a new combined-cycle natural-gas plant in Virginia this year,
built with GE and Mitsubishi equipment. It said it has no current plans to build
more such plants.
"Solar is very cheap," spokesman Dan Genest said. "These units were just not
cutting it."
(Reporting By Alwyn Scott; editing by Joe White and Edward Tobin)
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