Green Investors Are Finding Bargains in Trump’s Big Oil Era

Private infrastructure investors are snatching up green bargains in what’s emerged as a buyer’s market for wind, solar and battery projects.

The moves follow a a slump in , as US President Donald Trump’s call for more  has sent a chill through the sector and boosted  to pivot back to core business.

“We think the fundamentals of renewable power are as strong as they’ve ever been,” said Ignacio Paz-Ares, managing partner and deputy chief investment officer in the renewable power and transition group at . “Whenever we see a dislocation between what the market noise is and the fundamentals, that creates a very good opportunity for us to make acquisitions at very attractive entry prices.”

Brookfield is among the asset managers betting that rising energy consumption and competitive economics of renewables will continue to drive demand for the sector.

In recent months Brookfield has done a series of big green deals, including a  to buy an onshore renewables business from , a £1.75 billion ($2.3 billion)  in UK offshore wind farms from  and a €6.1 billion ($6.6 billion)  of French developer Neoen SA, which owns solar, wind and energy storage assets. Paz-Ares said the firm is looking to buy more as it continues to raise money for its .

The acquisition of Neoen was particularly good timing for Brookfield. The alternative asset manager and co-investors first bought a  in December for €39.85 a share, a third lower than Neoen’s peak in early 2021.

With all of these deals, Brookfield took assets from the public market into the private one. They highlight an opportune moment for investors with money to spend on the sector. A stock market bubble for all things green peaked in early 2021 and has now left valuations of publicly-traded clean energy companies around the lowest level in about five years.

“Stock prices haven’t done well over last few years, but in the real economy clean is booming,” said , head of sustainability and transition strategy at Jefferies. “When sentiment around something is low, it’s a good time to be a buyer.”

Shares of Clean Energy Stocks Plummeted in Recent Years

Source: Bloomberg

Vincent Policard, co-head of European infrastructure at , which is looking to  for its first Global Climate fund, said the geopolitical factors putting pressure on valuations is “creating a compelling opportunity for long-term investors like us to lean in and support the energy transition.”

Hedge fund manager Trium Capital said earlier this month the broad retreat by oil majors from renewables projects has left the market for low-carbon investments looking less crowded and more attractive.

This already appears to be playing out in offshore wind off the coast of the UK, where  had made some of its hugest bets a few years ago, driving up prices for projects.

Copenhagen Infrastructure Partners, which  with €12 billion this month, said it’s now starting to re-enter those waters.

“We stayed out of the big blood bloodbath in the North Sea,” said Jakob Baruel Poulsen, managing partner and co-founder at CIP, but the firm recently bought a 480-megawatt  off the western coast of the UK in the Irish Sea at “very attractive terms.”

CIP said last month it was acquiring full control from its current owners Cobra and Flotation Energy. A press release on the announcement said Flotation Energy  as a development partner to the project.

Renewables project owners in Europe are also benefitting from power prices that are still at historically high levels after natural gas supplies from Russia to Europe diminished in recent years.

“Power prices are incredibly good at the moment,” Baruel Poulsen said. “In Europe, long-term power prices are at least twice as high” as they were before the war in Ukraine, he said.

Beyond Europe, Baruel Poulsen said the new fund will invest in the US and Australia, markets where onshore renewables and batteries are set to play an increasing role in meeting demand in the power system.

Wind and solar are the  worldwide — at a time when energy consumption is set to soar with new demand sources such as data centers. In the US, annual wind farm additions are expected to increase by some 40% this year compared to 2024, according to BloombergNEF, while solar will see a 10% rise to a record 54.4 gigawatts of new capacity added.

Despite the challenging political situation in the US, “we continue to be bullish on the energy transition,” , managing director of Canada Pension Plan Investments, said on a panel at the Infrastructure Investor Global Summit in Berlin on Thursday. “We have been quite busy and we continue to find good opportunities in renewables.”

— With assistance from Allison McNeely and Natasha White

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