BP seeks collaborations to navigate the challenges of renewable energy

BP seeks collaborations to navigate the challenges of renewable energy

CompaniesBasf ⁤SeFollowBp PlcFollowEnBW Energie Baden Wuerttemberg ‍AGFollowShow more companiesBERLIN/LONDON, Nov 17 (Reuters) – BP (BP.L) is‍ seeking partners for offshore wind ​projects in Japan‍ and ⁣may invest in hydrogen technology companies to tackle inflation and equipment bottlenecks that have battered the renewables sector.The oil major plans to expand ⁤in low carbon energy ⁣in the coming decades as it seeks a long-term business model that can survive the global transition‌ from fossil fuels. Some⁤ investors have criticised the⁤ strategy for taking BP’s focus from higher returns on ⁢oil ⁢and ‌gas businesses.But Anja-Isabel Dotzenrath, who leads BP’s renewables business,⁢ told Reuters it‌ was “time to deliver” and seeking partners in Japan, one of the⁣ markets identified for growth, was part of the solution.Earlier this‍ month, she⁢ said the U.S. offshore wind industry was “fundamentally​ broken” after BP⁤ wrote⁣ down $540 million on its wind power projects offshore New York, blaming inflation and red ⁢tape that meant projects ran over budget and over time.Globally, the renewables sector has been undermined by slow permitting, ​technological challenges, rising raw material costs and⁢ higher costs of capital.BP’s renewable partner Norway’s Equinor (EQNR.OL), also​ took a related $300 million impairment, while⁣ Denmark’s​ Orsted ​(ORSTED.CO), the world’s No.1 ‌offshore wind ‍project company, scrapped two local⁣ projects and suffered ‍billions of euros of writedowns.As BP seeks to ⁣guarantee it can meet its internal returns target of⁤ 6% to 8% on renewables projects, Dotzenrath‍ said BP was working out how to reduce costs globally.”Of course,⁤ inflation is not just an issue for projects ​in the U.S.A.,” she said. “We are also trying to⁢ reduce costs in other regions using various levers, for example through optimised purchasing strategies, which may also lead us to invest directly in the supply​ chain.”PARTNERSHIPS⁤ IN WIND AND BEYONDIn the ⁢global offshore market, BP group is ‍targeting three- to-five clusters of four-to-eight⁣ gigawatts each, Dotzenrath said, singling out Japan, where BP is likely to team up with local utilities.”You need⁤ a Japanese partner, ⁢otherwise you can’t be successful there.‍ You need⁢ one⁣ of the local energy suppliers to help you push ahead⁤ with the permitting processes and establish ‍the onshore grid connection,” she said.Dotzenrath,​ who steered the renewables business of ⁣Germany’s top⁣ utility RWE (RWEG.DE) ‌before joining BP last year, said⁣ partnerships were crucial ⁣to addressing a bottleneck that ⁢has also become a problem in the hydrogen ​sector,‌ another area BP has prioritised for future growth.BP does not produce electrolysers, which split water to produce hydrogen, but Dotzenrath said did not⁤ rule out greater involvement.”This could mean, for example, that we’ll become an anchor investor ⁢in a leading technology manufacturer that⁣ is building a production plant ⁣for electrolysers,” she said.Germany, which ⁣under Chancellor Olaf Scholz hopes for a ​major role…

Source from www.reuters.com

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