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		European companies secure record amounts 
		of wind power 
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		 [January 29, 2019] 
		By Stine Jacobsen 
 COPENHAGEN (Reuters) - European companies 
		bought a record amount of wind power capacity last year, as 
		energy-hungry businesses like aluminum producers and IT giants look for 
		greener ways to drive their machinery and data centers.
 
 As wind power becomes competitive on price with conventional energy in 
		many countries, big companies have rushed to secure renewable energy to 
		manage costs and reduce their carbon emissions, while boosting their 
		image with customers.
 
 New wind deals through so-called corporate power purchase agreements (PPAs) 
		were signed in Europe last year for 1.5 gigawatts (GW) of capacity, up 
		from 1.3 GW in 2017, according to new data from industry body WindEurope.
 
		 
		
 Some companies have turned their support for wind power into a marketing 
		opportunity, with the world's top brewer AB InBev running an advert 
		during American Football's Super Bowl to say its Budweiser beer is made 
		by using 100 percent renewable energy - to a backing track of Bob 
		Dylan's "Blowin' in The Wind".
 
 Wind power PPAs signed by companies in Europe have now reached a total 
		capacity of 5 GW, almost the same as Denmark's total wind energy 
		capacity, WindEurope said.
 
 In 2018, the biggest buyers of wind power in Europe were aluminum 
		producers Norsk Hydro and Alcoa, which both signed big deals to buy 
		power from farms in Norway and Sweden.
 
 In July, Hydro signed the world's longest corporate PPA - for 29 years - 
		with Green Investment Group (GIG), a unit of Australian investment bank 
		Macquarie.
 
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			A wind turbine stands still in a field in Waremme, Belgium, January 
			25, 2016. REUTERS/Eric Vidal/File Photo 
            
 
            The PPA market was traditionally driven by the IT sector to power 
			data centers, but other industries have since joined in.
 Carmaker Mercedes-Benz announced its first PPA deals in Poland and 
			Germany in 2018, with the latter set to power its electric vehicle 
			and battery manufacturing.
 
 While companies are interested in buying renewable power to reduce 
			their carbon emissions and manage volatile energy costs, wind firms 
			are looking at new ways to secure income as the subsidies that have 
			underpinned the industry taper off.
 
 In the United States, companies like Alphabet's Google, Facebook and 
			Walmart have already developed a mature market for corporate PPAs.
 
 Corporate and other non-utility customers signed nearly 40 percent 
			of capacity contracted in the United States in the third quarter, 
			according to data from the American Wind Energy Association (AWEA).
 
 (Reporting by Stine Jacobsen; Editing by Mark Potter)
 
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