Double digit gains for cleantech

Cleantech shares enjoyed a bounce in December as the sector benefited from wider enthusiasm for stocks. Of the shares that we track, many saw double-digit gains during the month.

Among the larger cleantech businesses, shares in €7 billion market cap Suez Environnement jumped 11.6% to end the year at €15.45 each. The water and waste services firm announced last month that it had bought, for €174 million, the waste management activities of the New South Wales Government in Australia.

Spanish wind energy giants Gamesa and Iberdrola Renovables rose 13.1% and 12.7% respectively. Gamesa signed a deal to supply several hundred megawatts of turbines to Mexican wind farms in December (see page 3), and the company is rumoured to be looking to buy a majority stake in Indian turbine manufacturer Suzlon (although Suzlon has denied this in a statement to the Bombay Stock Exchange). Meanwhile the European Investment Bank granted Iberdrola a loan for £650 million that will be used to fund electricity distribution projects in the UK over a three year period.

Even Germany’s Q-Cells, the one-time solar sector bellwether that has seen a steady decline in its share price since 2008, benefited from the Santa rally, with its shares improving 17.5% during December – a rise explained by analysts as being due to investors judging the shares as having fallen too low.

Biofuels company CropEnergies jumped an impressive 30% during the month as it reported a significant increase in its revenues.

Smaller firms did well too. On NYSE Euronext’s Alternext market for growth companies, China Photovoltaic Group saw its shares jump 96.3% after it signed a major supply agreement for its solar modules (see page 6).

Over on London’s Alternative Investment Market, Nature Group announced it was expanding through the acquisition of a Rotterdam-based waste management business. The firm’s shares increased by 17.5% during December.

To add to the cheer, the final month of the year also saw flotations on both sides of the Atlantic. In New York, SemiLEDs – a company that makes ultra-high brightness light emitting diode chips in Taiwan – joined NASDAQ in an $80 million IPO. Meanwhile, London’s AIM played host to ProPhotonix which raised £825,000 on its debut on the junior market.

 

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AIM Comment

AIM - a tough market for cleantech compnies - by Andrew Hore

Although a few new entrants have joined AIM this year, cleantech companies are still leaving the junior market. Stock markets around the world are becoming tougher places to raise money again, but the problems with the latest company to shun its AIM quotation date back to its flotation and lack of financial progress since, rather than current market conditions.

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Editor´s Message

by Anne McIvor

The Solyndra collapse in the US has damaged investor sentiment throughout the solar industry. In an unrelated move, the UK Government has backtracked on its policy to provide feed-in-tariffs (FiTs) for the solar sector. The UK Government’s argument is that the prices of solar modules have fallen substantially since the policy was first put in place, and that the FiT subsidy now permits solar installers to make an unjustifiable return on their investments.

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Cleantech Utility Comment

UK Energy Policy – Prescribed by Germany and France? - by Nigel Hawkins

The last few weeks have been busy times in the EU and UK energy sectors – and the next few months are unlikely to be any different. 

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