Categories: Commentary

E.ON and RWE report losses in fossil power generation as they turn to renewables

Published by

PV Magazine

E.ON's PV power plant on the Pellworm Island in Germany E.ON
E.ON’s PV power plant on the Pellworm Island in Germany
E.ON

German energy giant E.ON today announced a net annual loss of EUR 7 billion. Yesterday, rival company RWE reported a 45% decrease in its fossil fuel businesses but a more-than-double revenue increase in its renewable sector.

The largest German utility E.ON SE reported today its biggest annual net loss of €7 billion ($7.7 billion) in 2015, indicating a 121% decrease from €3.2 billion ($3.47 billion) in 2014. The company is expecting that future profit, dividends and cash flows will continue to decline further due to the worsening conditions of the power sector.

“Our numbers reflect the far-reaching structural transformation that our industry is experiencing, and that continues unabated in the current year,” E.ON chief executive Johannes Teyssen said in a statement. “The general economic environment and the situation in our industry have deteriorated significantly.”

Earlier this year the company announced a spin off of its fossil-fuel plants into a separate company called Uniper that will be listed in the second half of this year. E.ON itself will focus on the renewable energy sector, including solar PV and wind.

RWE AG, E.ON’s closest competitor, yesterday announced that the profitability of its nuclear, coal and gas energy plants decreased by 45% over the past year, falling to €543 million ($596 million). At the same time, its operating profit in the renewable energy sector more than doubled to €493 million ($541 million) in 2015 from €186 million ($204 million) in 2014.

Last year, the company added about 1 GW of new wind farm capacity worldwide, including the 295 MW Nordsee Ost and 576 MW Gwynt y Mor offshore wind farms.

“Renewables are increasingly becoming a main pillar of our business. Besides the operational business, our entire focus in 2016 will be on restructuring the group to lay the foundations for further growth,” RWE CEO Peter Terium said in a statement.

To date, all of Germany’s four major energy providers have written down the value of their power stations as a result of the government’s move towards renewables and the collapse in wholesale energy prices, which are at their lowest level since 2002, Bloomberg reports.

Source: PV Magazine. Reproduced with permission.

Share
Published by

Recent Posts

New tax on renewables won’t be retrospective, but will send “opposite message” to foreign investors

Controversial tax changes for foreign renewables investors have dropped one problematic aspect and kept another…

2 July 2026

One in 17 Australian homes now has a solar battery, as rebate installs pass 450,000 at one-year mark

Amid the hype around the launch of the Solar Sharer Offer, federal Labor's flagship consumer…

2 July 2026

State becomes first to ban retail energy “loyalty tax,” in bid to save customers hundreds of dollars a year

State acts where the national rule maker has declined to tread, announcing an Australia-first ban…

2 July 2026

Darwin residents want answers on toxic gas export emissions. Science shows their concerns are warranted

Evidence shows benzene and other gas-related chemicals pose significant health risks. So why is the…

2 July 2026

Electrochemical “bath” could bring spent lithium-ion batteries back to life, cut cost of recycling in half

Researchers believe they have found a way to recover almost the full life of lithium-ion…

2 July 2026

Thin white strips on brown slopes: Manufactured ski seasons are fuelling the climate problem

Ribbons of manufactured snow remind us that national parks should be front-line responses to climate…

2 July 2026