GLTE San Francisco November 2011

43
THE MAGIC OF ENERGY EFFICIENCY STEVEN FAWKES ECOSUMMIT 22 nd March 2012

description

Made to GLTE San Francisco November 2011

Transcript of GLTE San Francisco November 2011

Page 1: GLTE San Francisco November 2011

THE MAGIC OF ENERGY EFFICIENCY

STEVEN FAWKES

ECOSUMMIT 22nd March 2012

Page 2: GLTE San Francisco November 2011

IMPORTANT NOTICE

This document is issued by Matrix Corporate Capital LLP (“Matrix”) which is authorised and regulated by the Financial Services Authority and is

a member of the London Stock Exchange. The contents are based upon sources of information believed to be reliable but no warranty or

representation, expressed or implied, is given as to their accuracy or completeness.

Matrix provides a number of services including Corporate Finance, Broking, Research, Trading and Market Making. All services are provided

only to Professional clients and Eligible counterparties (i.e. market professionals). Matrix does not provide services to Retail clients.

Any opinion expressed in these documents reflects our judgement at the date of publication and neither Matrix, nor any its affiliated or

associated companies, nor any of their partners, directors or employees accepts any responsibility in respect of the information or

recommendations contained herein which are subject to change without notice.

This is not an offer, nor solicitation, to buy or sell any investment referred to in this document. The material is general information intended for

recipients who understand the risks associated with investment. It does not take into account of whether an investment, course of action, or

associated risks are suitable for the recipient.

Matrix or its affiliated or associated companies and their partners, directors or employees may, as principal or as agent, make purchases, sales

and offers to purchase or sell in the open market or otherwise and may have positions in or options on any such investment(s). Matrix may

provide services (including corporate finance advice) where the flow of information is restricted by a Chinese Wall. Accordingly, information may

be available to Matrix that is not reflected in this document. Matrix or its affiliated or associated companies may have acted upon or used

research recommendations before they have been published.

Page 3: GLTE San Francisco November 2011
Page 4: GLTE San Francisco November 2011

20%

Page 5: GLTE San Francisco November 2011

It is not all about CO2

Page 6: GLTE San Francisco November 2011

Air pollution causes 2 million premature deaths a yearWorld Health Organisation

Air pollution causes nearly 170,000 deaths a year in ChinaWorld Bank

Page 7: GLTE San Francisco November 2011
Page 8: GLTE San Francisco November 2011
Page 9: GLTE San Francisco November 2011

1.3 billion

Page 10: GLTE San Francisco November 2011

How efficient are we?

475

5555

Source: University of Cambridge, global figures , in EJSource: University of Cambridge

Page 11: GLTE San Francisco November 2011

11

Page 12: GLTE San Francisco November 2011

INEFFICIENCY EVERYWHERE

The US runs at least 8 large power stations just to power stuff that is turned off

Less than 10% of the power plant fuel that makes electricity for pumping applications actually creates customer value

Less than 1% of the power plant fuel that makes electricity for a data centre actually creates customer value

Source: Rocky Mountain Institute

Page 13: GLTE San Francisco November 2011

Global potential for energy efficiency

$170bn a year investment would:

-halve the projected growth in energy demand (reducing demand by ~ 64 million barrels a day)

-produce half the emissions abatement required to keep atmospheric CO2 at 450ppm

-have an average IRR of all projects 17% (at $50/barrel oil)

Source: McKinsey

Page 14: GLTE San Francisco November 2011

barriers

14

Page 15: GLTE San Francisco November 2011

15

Page 16: GLTE San Francisco November 2011

Some of the money is nailed down

Many and various barriers to improving energy efficiency including;

- Supply side domination

- Low priority in many organizations

- Run by engineers / not strategic

- Split incentives – landlord / tenant problem

- Measurement of results

- Limited capacity – technical skill shortages

- Access to capital

- The ribbon problem

16

Page 17: GLTE San Francisco November 2011
Page 18: GLTE San Francisco November 2011

Conclusions

Energy is at the start of a technological revolution

The future will be:-radically more efficient-significantly cleaner-more diverse

Page 19: GLTE San Francisco November 2011

Some of the money is nailed down

Many and various barriers to improving energy efficiency including;

- Supply side domination

- Low priority in many organizations

- Run by engineers / not strategic

- Split incentives – landlord / tenant problem

- Measurement of results

- Limited capacity – technical skill shortages

- Access to capital

- The ribbon problem

19

Page 20: GLTE San Francisco November 2011

Capital requirements

• $170bn a year investment would half the projected growth in energy demand (reducing demand by ~ 64 million barrels a day)

• up to half the emissions abatement required to keep atmospheric CO2 at 450ppm

• average IRR of all projects 17% (at $50/barrel oil)• $83bn a year invested by 2020 would allow

industrial sector to abate ~25 million barrels a day

Source: McKinsey

20

Page 21: GLTE San Francisco November 2011

Us real estate to 2050

21

$0.5 trillion invested

$1.4 trillion NPV

Source: Lovins

Page 22: GLTE San Francisco November 2011

Investor appetite

“Institutional income investors are looking for an iconic investment in this area”

Fund Manager

Several investors have committed funds in principle but………….few examples

22

Page 23: GLTE San Francisco November 2011

Business models – esco / EPC

23

Page 24: GLTE San Francisco November 2011

Not a new idea

Boulton and Watt – 1770s

Associated Heat Services – 1966

Utility Management Company – 1982

US ESCO industry been very active- 1,473 projects- $2.3 billion investment- 74% in public sector (MUSH)- not really spread into commercial real estate

24

Page 25: GLTE San Francisco November 2011

Problems with the esco model

ESCOs have limited balance sheets

Energy Performance Contract model requires client to take on debt

Accounting standards – on / off-balance sheet question

Even the largest projects are too small for institutional income investors who have cheque sizes > $100m/£100m

25

Page 26: GLTE San Francisco November 2011

BUSINESS MODEL INNOVATION

Need to scale and structure projects in a way that allows institutional investors to invest at scale

Two innovations are emerging:

• Managed Energy Service Agreements• Transaction vehicles

26

Page 27: GLTE San Francisco November 2011

Mesa structure

27Source: Deutsche Bank

Vendors

Page 28: GLTE San Francisco November 2011

The mineral rights analogy

28

Asset owner (farmer in PA/building owner) does not have capital or technical knowledge to access asset (shale gas/efficiency savings)

3rd party pays “access fee” to have the right to exploit the resource

3rd party uses external capital to develop the projects

Royalty payment / profit sharing over time

Source: Deutsche Bank

Page 29: GLTE San Francisco November 2011
Page 30: GLTE San Francisco November 2011

A new industrial revolution?

Page 31: GLTE San Francisco November 2011

contentS

• Potential for energy efficiency

• Barriers

• Capital requirements

• Business models

• Summary

31

Page 32: GLTE San Francisco November 2011

Inefficiency is everywhere

Central power stationsTypically 30-40% efficient

Power amplifiersTypically 15% efficient – 85% goes to heat

BuildingsUS building stock consumes 2.5 x energy European building stock after

correcting for climate

Data centresUseful computing uses 2.5% of energy input

etc etc etc

32

Page 33: GLTE San Francisco November 2011

barriers

33

Page 34: GLTE San Francisco November 2011

Some of the money is nailed down

Many and various barriers to improving energy efficiency including;

- Supply side domination

- Low priority in many organizations

- Run by engineers / not strategic

- Split incentives – landlord / tenant problem

- Measurement of results

- Limited capacity – technical skill shortages

- Access to capital

- The ribbon problem

34

Page 35: GLTE San Francisco November 2011

Capital requirements

• $170bn a year investment would half the projected growth in energy demand (reducing demand by ~ 64 million barrels a day)

• up to half the emissions abatement required to keep atmospheric CO2 at 450ppm

• average IRR of all projects 17% (at $50/barrel oil)• $83bn a year invested by 2020 would allow

industrial sector to abate ~25 million barrels a day

Source: McKinsey

35

Page 36: GLTE San Francisco November 2011

Us real estate to 2050

36

$0.5 trillion invested

$1.4 trillion NPV

Source: Lovins

Page 37: GLTE San Francisco November 2011

Investor appetite

“Institutional income investors are looking for an iconic investment in this area”

Fund Manager

Several investors have committed funds in principle but………….few examples

37

Page 38: GLTE San Francisco November 2011

Business models – esco / EPC

38

Page 39: GLTE San Francisco November 2011

Problems with the esco model

ESCOs have limited balance sheets

Energy Performance Contract model requires client to take on debt

Accounting standards – on / off-balance sheet question

Even the largest projects are too small for institutional income investors who have cheque sizes > $100m/£100m

39

Page 40: GLTE San Francisco November 2011

BUSINESS MODEL INNOVATION

Need to scale and structure projects in a way that allows institutional investors to invest at scale

Two innovations are emerging:

• Managed Energy Service Agreements• Transaction vehicles

40

Page 41: GLTE San Francisco November 2011

Mesa structure

41Source: Deutsche Bank

Vendors

Page 42: GLTE San Francisco November 2011

The mineral rights analogy

42

Asset owner (farmer in PA/building owner) does not have capital or technical knowledge to access asset (shale gas/efficiency savings)

3rd party pays “access fee” to have the right to exploit the resource

3rd party uses external capital to develop the projects

Royalty payment / profit sharing over time

Source: Deutsche Bank

Page 43: GLTE San Francisco November 2011

summary

• Potential for energy efficiency is very large• Energy efficiency does not require subsidies• Improving EE addresses supply, cost and environmental

problems• EE is gaining political support• Capital requirements are large but manageable• Returns are in line with or exceed expectations• Institutional income investors would like to invest• ESCO / EPC type model is only part of the answer• Managed Energy Service Agreements and Transaction

Vehicles are beginning to emerge• A few large scale examples will catalyze change – expect

to see them soon

43