Spanish Fly: Iberdrola's $8 Billion U.S. Bet
Posted by Keith Johnson

Spain's Iberdrola Renovables, the world's biggest clean-energy
utility, said Sunday it will invest $8 billion in renewable energy
(wind power, basically) in the U.S. over the next two years. That's
more than the company originally planned to invest in the U.S.

How to read this? For starters, it's another sign the U.S. wind power
market is going great guns regardless of what Congress does for
clean-energy tax credits. As we noted last week, the Department of
Energy figures wind power could provide 20% of U.S. electricity by
2030—with or without subsidies. And T. Boone Pickens put the first $2
billion down on his $10 billion bet on the world's biggest wind farm
in Texas last week, without waiting for the tax credits to be renewed.

It's also a sign of how attractive the U.S. is for European
clean-energy companies in particular. They have all the tailwinds:
size, experience, a strong currency that make U.S. deals look cheap,
and hardware. The big players like Iberdrola have already sourced
their wind turbines for the next few years, removing one of the
industry's biggest headaches; Iberdrola just took advantage of the
strong euro to sign a big deal with General Electric to snag all the
turbines it will need for the next two years.

How big is Iberdrola's bet? The old rule of thumb (1 million euros
buys the hardware and pays to install a megawatt of wind power) no
longer applies for sure given price inflation in steel, components,
and other things that make up turbines. But Iberdrola's latest U.S.
push is clearly in the same league as Mr. Pickens' 4-gigawatt Pampa
Wind Project, the biggest to date in the U.S., and on paper the same
size as four smallish nuclear plants.

Of course, there could be another reading to Iberdrola's sudden rush
of enthusiasm. The Spanish company has spent a year trying to win
regulatory approval for its 4.6 billion euro purchase of Energy East,
a utility operating in the U.S. northeast. So far, the hurdle is New
York regulators, worried Iberdrola will dominate the market.
Iberdrola, which argues that it is crucial for the future of New
York's clean-energy development, is pressing for a decision by the end
of this month.

Perhaps Iberdrola's big announcement is an $8 billion shot across the
bow to preserve the Energy East deal — another offensive in the
company's bid to make itself too big to ignore.

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