2010
Clean Energy Investment Hits a New Record
Jan 19, 2011 - renewableenergyworld.com
London -- Bloomberg New Energy Finance released
2010 investment figures this week. Although certain
sectors like wind and biofuels had a rough year in
some countries, the overall trends in project finance,
venture capital and supply-chain investments were
very positive.
According to BNEF, new global investment in clean
energy reached $243 billion in 2010, up from $186.5
billion in 2009. Last year's investment figures double
those from 2006. The main factors in this growth
were the massive Chinese market, the expansion of
offshore wind, hot European solar markets and global
R&D.
“This is a spectacular result, beating previous
record investment levels by a clear margin of more
than $50bn, said BNEF founder and CEO Michael Liebriech. “It
flies in the face of skepticism about the clean energy
sector among public market investors.”
Here's a breakdown of the investment figures, as
reported by BNEF in its latest analysis:
•Investment in small-scale, distributed generation
projects surged by 91% last year to $59.6bn, with
the dominant element rooftop and other small-scale
solar projects, notably in Germany but also in the
US, the Czech Republic, Italy and elsewhere.
•
Investment in China was up 30% to $51.1bn in 2010,
by far the largest figure for any country. In 2009
Asia and Oceania overtook the Americas, and in 2010
it narrowed the gap further on Europe, Middle East
and Africa as the leading region of the world for
clean energy investment.
•
Offshore wind finance had another good year in 2010,
led by a $1.7bn package to fund the next, 295MW phases
of the Thornton Bank offshore wind farm off the coast
of Belgium, and a $1bn deal to finance the Borkum
West II project in German waters.
•
Research and development spending on clean energy
technologies by companies and governments grew to
a record level in 2010, according to Bloomberg New
Energy Finance data. Within this, the main constituent
was government R&D, which reached $21bn, up from
$15.8bn in 2009, while corporate R&D recovered
from 2009's recession-hit figure of $12.8bn, to reach
$14.4bn, giving a total for global clean energy R&D
of $35.5bn.
•
Venture capital and private equity investment had
a strong year, up 28% from the 2009 total to reach
$8.8bn, though failing to match 2008's record figure
of $11.8bn. Among the private equity deals of 2010
were a $400m financing for US wind project developer
Pattern Energy Group, and $350m for Better Place,
the US-based electric vehicle charging network specialist.
•
Public market investment bounced back from its recession-driven
lows in 2008 and 2009, up 18% to $17.4bn in 2010.
This was not a record figure - it fell short of the
$24.6bn clean energy companies raised on stock markets
in 2007. Among the biggest deals in this category
in 2010 were the $3.5bn initial public offering in
November by Enel Green Power of Italy, and the $1.1bn
flotation by Chinese wind turbine maker Xinjiang
Goldwind Science & Technology in Hong Kong in
October. It is notable that this transaction level
took place despite the lacklustre performance of
clean energy shares during 2010, with the NEX index
dropping 14.6% and underperforming the S&P 500
by more than 20% over the year.
•
The largest investment asset class in 2010 was, as
usual, asset finance of utility-scale projects such
as wind farms, solar parks and biofuel plants. This
rose 19% to $127.8bn last year.
In terms of sector, the most notable feature of
2010 was the 49% growth in investment in solar
power to
$89.3bn, driven largely by distributed generation
projects in Europe, where investment grew 91% last
year to $59.6bn as already noted. Bloomberg New
Energy Finance estimates that 86% of investment
in small-scale
solar took place in markets where feed-In tariffs
have been introduced.
Overall investment in wind gained 31% to reach $96bn.
It is notable that 38% of this total was accounted
for either by China or by large European offshore
wind farms.
Energy-smart technologies such as smart grid, energy
management, electric vehicles and power storage also
had a strong year, with financing of companies in
this sector reaching a record $23.9bn, up 27% on
2009.
In the other sectors, biofuels had almost a flat
year, with overall investment down slightly to $7.9bn
from $8.1bn in 2009 and far below the record of $20.9bn
set in 2006 during the US’s corn-based ethanol
bubble. Biomass and waste-to-energy was also flat,
at $11.6bn, compared with $12bn in 2009.
BNEF estimates that investment levels will need
to reach $500 billion per year by 2020 in order to
stabilize greenhouse gas emissions. While there is
much work to be done in getting to that target, the
substantial increase in 2010 is a big step in the
right direction.
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