{"id":123575,"date":"2021-12-01T18:29:24","date_gmt":"2021-12-01T18:29:24","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/fin2me.com\/?p=123575"},"modified":"2021-12-01T18:29:24","modified_gmt":"2021-12-01T18:29:24","slug":"drax-is-expected-to-profit-from-uk-energy-crisis-until-2023","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/fin2me.com\/business\/drax-is-expected-to-profit-from-uk-energy-crisis-until-2023\/","title":{"rendered":"Drax is expected to profit from UK energy crisis until 2023"},"content":{"rendered":"
Company\u2019s shares hit seven-year high after revealing plans to invest \u00a33bn despite questions over biomass<\/p>\n
Last modified on Wed 1 Dec 2021 10.50 EST<\/p>\n
The owner of the Drax power station is expected to profit from Britain\u2019s energy crisis until 2023 and will plough billions into doubling its production of wood pellets for burning by 2030 despite mounting opposition from environmentalists.<\/p>\n
The FTSE 250 energy company\u2019s shares hit seven-year highs on Wednesday after it told investors it aimed to invest \u00a33bn by 2030. Part of that investment would be directed towards doubling production and sales of biomass pellets, which Drax uses at its North Yorkshire power plant as an alternative to burning coal.<\/p>\n<\/p>\n
Its claims that electricity produced in this way is \u201ccarbon neutral\u201d is disputed, with green groups saying burning biomass produces emissions that contribute to the climate crisis.<\/p>\n
Drax will fund the expansion plans using its own cash as it prepares to profit from record high energy market prices in its long-term contracts over the next two years.<\/p>\n
The company\u2019s is valued at \u00a32.43bn after its share price rose on Wednesday morning from 564p to more than 606p, its highest since October 2014.<\/p>\n
Drax told investors its profits for the current financial year were likely to be at the upper end of market expectations. It said this was despite the company not being \u201ca significant beneficiary\u201d of the record gas and electricity prices that have forced factories to close and energy suppliers to almost 4m UK households to go bust.<\/p>\n
Most of Drax\u2019s electricity generation is sold via long-term contracts, meaning its earnings this year will rely more heavily on market prices a year or two ago than recent historic highs.<\/p>\n
However, the company has managed to increase its earnings for this year by selling some electricity on a short-term basis and agreeing to fire up its last coal-burning units to help keep the lights on in September and again in November. It is expected to close both coal units by next September.<\/p>\n
Drax will also be able to hike up the price of the electricity it generates for long-term contracts for 2022 and 2023. In addition, the company will continue to benefit from subsidies worth hundreds of millions of pounds to generate biomass electricity through the government\u2019s renewable energy scheme.<\/p>\n
The company has already received billions through the scheme, including \u00a3800m last year. This is despite growing environmental concerns over biomass electricity.<\/p>\n
Questions about the method have also been raised within financial circles. The financial services firm Jefferies told its clients in October that bioenergy was \u201cunlikely to make a positive contribution\u201d towards tackling the climate crisis and was \u201cnot carbon neutral, in almost all instances\u201d.<\/p>\n
Will Gardiner, Drax\u2019s chief executive, said criticisms of the company\u2019s claim that it was on track to becoming \u201ccarbon neutral\u201d were a \u201cmischaracterisation of reality\u201d.<\/p>\n
He added that Drax\u2019s long-term strategy \u2013 which involves fitting its biomass burners with carbon capture technology to generate \u201ccarbon negative\u201d electricity \u2013 was backed by the UK government, and would play \u201ca unique piece\u201d in energy transition efforts globally.<\/p>\n
\u201cWe\u2019re excited about the opportunities ahead, and we have a lot of work to do,\u201d he said.<\/p>\n