Wind farm

Is it the end of the road for independent wind farms?

As Novera mulls possible takeover offer, analyst predicts independent green energy firms will become prime targets for energy giants

Written by James Murray

Investment firm 3i Infrastructure Limited has today confirmed it has approached renewable energy company Novera and is considering a £112m cash offer for the firm.

In a statement on Novera's website the investment company said that in the wake of recent press speculation it could confirm it was mulling a 90p per share offer through its wholly-owned subsidiary Harrier Acquisitions Limited.

The statement follows an announcement from Novera's board on Friday revealing it had been approached about a deal. However, the company stressed that "the making of any formal offer is subject to a number of pre-conditions which Novera is currently seeking to address (although there is no certainty that these pre-conditions will be satisfied or waived)".

After climbing over 26 per cent on Friday to 79p, shares in the AIM-listed Novera continued to climb today, clearing 87p a share at the time of going to press.

Novera is one of the UK's leading independent renewable energy companies and wind farm operators. The firm currently operates a 14.5Mw farm in Wales, has a 30Mw farm under construction in Yorkshire and a further four farms at the planning stage with a goal of generating 250Mw a year by 2011. The company also operates 45 landfill gas energy generation facilities across the UK and is planning a waste-to-energy power station in East London.

The approach for Novera comes as Scottish and Southern Energy (SSE) on Friday announced it had completed its €1.1bn acquisition of Ireland-based wind farm operator Airtricity.

Tariq Akbar, senior energy analyst at research firm Datamonitor, said that further M&A activity in the renewable energy sector was now on the cards as larger energy suppliers seek a quick way of meeting their green energy targets and private equity firms seek to exploit a consolidating market.

"The likelihood is that the smaller renewable energy players will be gobbled up by the big boys as acquisition is the easiest way to help meet their carbon targets," he explained. "Private equity has also got increasingly involved in these smaller companies in the past few years, because the possibility of being acquired by the big energy companies looks like an attractive exit strategy for any investment."

Dale Vince, managing director of green energy provider Ecotricity, said there was a chance that large energy utilities would snap up independent wind farm operators, but noted that it was equally likely new start ups would emerge to take the place of acquired firms. "The big guys find it easier to acquire than do the spade work so perhaps there will always be an indie sector while wind energy faces such huge planning hurdles and requires real commitment," he observed.

Tags:

reader comments

related articles

 

SSE to acquire Airtricity for €1bn

Scottish and Southern Energy to more than double wind capacity through deal 07 Jan 2008

Shell's exit fails to derail London Array

E.ON and Dong reach agreement to buy out oil giant's stake in project consortium 21 Jul 2008

Duke shells out $320m for 500MW of wind

Acquisition of Catamount Energy underlines US utility's commitment to renewables 30 Jun 2008

related whitepapers

today's top stories

Solid as a rock - business continuity in a global manufacturer

From power supply problems in Nigeria to email availability in Stockport, PZ Cussons is prepared for anything 02 Dec 2008

Technology and privacy

Watch the final video in a two-part Computing roundtable debate on the importance of putting data privacy issues at the heart of your IT plans 02 Dec 2008

IT staff desperate to keep their jobs

Most would work longer hours for less pay 02 Dec 2008

VMware View 3 enhances virtual desktops

Virtual clients now take up less storage space and can be 'checked out' to a laptop 02 Dec 2008

Technology and privacy

Watch part one of a two-part Computing roundtable debate on the importance of putting data privacy issues at the heart of your IT plans 01 Dec 2008

Advertisement

Newsletter signup

Sign up for our range of FREE newsletters:

Existing User

Newsletter user login:

Advertisement

Jobs

Related jobs

Job of the week

Job alerts

Sign up here

Find your next job

IT Salary Checker

Check salary here

Advertisement

White papers

Search white papers

Top categories

VPN, Extranet and Intranet Solutions

WAN/ LAN Solutions

Network Security

Interoperability-Connectivity

Grid/ Utility Computing

Latest poll

Will the terrorist attacks in Mumbai affect your offshoring plans?

Will the terrorist attacks in Mumbai affect your offshoring plans?

Is India becoming a risky destination?

Previous poll results

Latest audio and video articles

Padlocked CDVideo

Technology and privacy

Watch the final video in a two-part Computing roundtable debate on the importance of putting data privacy issues at the heart of your IT plans 02 Dec 2008

Podcast imageAudio

Computing podcast - Standard Life's offshoring plans; and the prospects for government IT

The insurance giant outlines its new outsourcing strategy; and we ask if the government's economic bailout will affect its IT plans 28 Nov 2008

Latest in-depth articles

Parcel being packedFeatures

Case study: eSpares and business continuity

Online electricals business has managed to decrease its downtime 02 Dec 2008

Royal Blackburn HospitalFeatures

NHS trust recovers from server overdose

Virtualisation technology breathed new life into East Lancashire's cost-intensive system 02 Dec 2008

Advertisement

Primary Navigation