能源转型融资翻两番并追求净零排放

麦肯锡合伙人 Kassia Yanosek 详细介绍了私募股权在气候转型中的独特作用,尽管企业对与企业合作感到不安,并且在政府加大支持力度的同时需要将资金增加四倍。

麦肯锡合伙人 Kassia Yanosek 详细介绍了私募股权在气候转型中的独特作用,尽管企业对与企业合作感到不安,并且在政府加大支持力度的同时需要将资金增加四倍。来源:Shutterstock.com

Hart Energy 高级编辑 Patrick McGee 与麦肯锡公司合伙人 Kassia Yanosek 进行了交谈,后者最近在《外交事务》杂志上共同撰写了一篇关于私人金融在能源转型中的作用的文章。从能源高管到气候活动人士,每个人都在等待有关 2023 年能源转型支出与 2022 年全球 1.1 万亿美元支出相比如何的消息,亚诺塞克注意到正在采取行动的私人资金来源。

“可再生能源实际上只会对我们的总体碳排放量产生几个百分点的影响。” Kassia Yanosek,麦肯锡公司 

私募股权的工作是一个令人鼓舞的迹象,可以提供其他市场无法提供的长期融资。但她指出,这只是一个开始,为了实现气候目标,能源转型资金需要增加四倍。

帕特里克·麦吉:为什么投资者越来越愿意花钱向清洁能源转型?

Kassia Yanosek:投资者寻找主要增长趋势,能源转型就是其中之一。有明显的驱动因素将支持这一转型能源系统所需的大量资本。麦肯锡最近的研究表明,到 2050 年,我们需要将当今世界的电力需求增加一倍以上。这将需要大量的资金。投资者看到了这个机会。他们还看到了投资脱碳的机会,因为我们将对我们的能源系统进行脱碳。这当然是 COP28 的成果之一。

运输业将实现脱碳。这意味着新的燃料、创造新的、更清洁的分子的新方法。这就是投资者为转型投入资金的原因。我们的数据显示,到 2050 年,我们每年需要约 4 万亿美元才能实现净零排放。有些数字甚至更高。当你看到这些美元时,投资者就开始排队了。

总理:能源转型投资大幅增加。这足以成为头条新闻。足以实现零排放吗?

KY:无论是 4 万亿美元还是 5 万亿美元,这个数字都是巨大的,这就是从现在到 2050 年实现脱碳能源系统每年所需的资本数额。如今,其中四分之一已被花费。我们需要的比我们今天投入的要多得多,而我们正处于这一阶段的开始阶段。不仅投资在增加,而且我们还看到私人资本池中的资本也在增加。去年,全球私募股权基金和主权财富基金、养老基金等基础设施基金筹集了1600亿美元用于转型。客观地说,这大约是去年石油和天然气基金筹集金额的八倍。显然,我们看到资本所有者为转型分配资本,我们也开始看到它的实施,但仍有很多工作要做。

PM:您能透露一下哪些技术投入了多少?这说明了投资者对许多此类解决方案(其中许多尚未得到证实)的信心?

KY:这 1 万亿美元中的大部分(80% 到 85%)都用于成熟的技术、风能、太阳能和电池以及电动汽车的相关技术。在我们的《外交事务》文章中,我们称之为“浅层脱碳”,因为可再生能源实际上只对我们的总体碳排放量产生几个百分点的影响。真正需要的是对我们所说的深度脱碳进行更多投资。深度脱碳是一些可以显着转变的游戏规则改变者。例如,绿色氢,大规模的碳捕获和储存,直接空气捕获,即从大气中提取碳并捕获它的能力,更清洁的燃料,就像零碳燃料一样。我们仍然认为这些技术对大规模投资者没有吸引力,因为它们仍然是新的;因为市场还不存在。它们对于投资者来说太贵了,无法真正看到资本回报。这就是为什么投资者还没有去那里,但他们正在尝试。

PM:有一些所谓的“知名”公司投资于绿色技术。他们是认真的,还是只是将投资作为密切关注新技术和竞争的一种方式?

KY:我诚实的回答是,以上都是。有一些棕色公司远远领先于同行。他们通常是那些在核心业务中表现出色并且有能力说服投资者分配一些资本进行转型的公司。西方石油公司就是一个很好的例子。他们的低碳风险投资集团引起了巨大轰动,并刚刚宣布与贝莱德建立合作伙伴关系,投资5 亿美元建设他们在二叠纪盆地的第一座直接空气捕获工厂。一些设备公司也在[投资],因为他们认为领先市场将使他们处于有利地位。贝克休斯就是一个例子。他们积极参与转型业务,无论是天然气相关业务还是氢电解槽业务。还有像埃克森美孚这样的公司,他们下了很大的赌注,大部分资金都是自己筹集的。CO 2碳捕获是埃克森美孚重点关注的领域之一,他们刚刚收购了Denbury,该公司恰好拥有最重要的 CO 2基础设施资产之一,即德克萨斯州地区的CO 2管道。这些只是几个例子,但肯定还有其他人说,“我会等待”。我不会成为先行者,”而且这样的人有很多。它确实涵盖了所有领域。

总理:有些石油和天然气公司已经退出了绿色投资。我们是否可以将此视为技术承诺可能被夸大的迹象?

KY:当你观察美国能源公司之间的价值[和]估值差异时,绝对有一个明确的信息是公众股东正在告诉能源公司,这些美国能源公司在能源转型方面的行动有点低调——至少是这样。就在电力和可再生能源领域的重大举措而言,与大举进军可再生能源和可再生能源领域的欧洲公司相比。这些之间存在巨大的估值差距。截至大约一个月前,英国石油公司 (BP) 和壳牌公司的交易价格比美国同行低 45% 至 50%。如果你看一下美国与欧洲公司的数据,你会发现一个拐点,即 2019 年左右,当欧洲公司开始大举进军清洁能源领域时,价值观开始出现分歧。这些能源公司决定快速转型,大力投资电力技术,但这并不是他们的竞争优势——他们是拥有石油和天然气能力的石油和天然气公司,而且其中许多资产也拥有很多资产。 ,回报比他们的石油和天然气业务低得多。从数学的本质来看,如果他们将所有资本转移到转型业务中,他们创造的价值将低于同行。因此,我不会说这表明技术的承诺被夸大了,因为他们实际上是在投资经过验证的技术,风能和太阳能经过验证的技术。只是他们不是这些资产的正确所有者。

展望未来,我认为您将看到能源公司更加关注与其核心业务和核心理解更加一致的新能源。例如,碳捕获,您需要了解地质学才能储存碳。他们有这种能力。有些人正在研究地热,钻入地球。这需要地质专业知识和理解。氢和其他相关新燃料需要许多下游和上游生产商拥有的工程能力和系统技术。我认为技术将会发生转变,他们将成为这些技术的更好拥有者,而现在,其中许多技术仍然太新生。

PM:您为什么对私人资本市场的转型持乐观态度?

KY:如果你看看来自养老基金和主权财富基金的资本,就会发现他们正在寻找长期资产来偿还债务。许多养老基金一直关注基础设施资产,该特定资产类别在过去 20 年中无疑有所增长。能源转型非常适合实现这些目标。因此,他们对投资正在部署的基金非常感兴趣,例如,电气化趋势,这将是长期的。例如,太阳能和风能已经是经过验证的技术,应该会摆脱长期现金流。因此,我认为乐观的部分原因在于这种转变的长期性质,以及它将如何与这些基金需要解决的负债相匹配。

我还想说,这更多是在风险较高的方面,众所周知,私募股权历史上一直处于颠覆的中心。每当一个行业发生颠覆时,私募股权往往就会出现,并且能够真正创造价值,因为他们可以在他们认为有机会挑选技术或公司并提高其效率的领域创造增长。

PM:私募股权经常在大街上和主流媒体上受到诽谤,但您相信它可以在能源转型中发挥积极作用。你能描述一下吗?

KY:私募股权,至少在能源领域,更适合直接购买一家公司或支持开发商,而开发商正在开发资产。正在发生的变化是,私募股权现在将开始直接与企业合作。这是私募股权所扮演的新角色。许多企业不信任私募股权,但私募股权正开始与企业合作建立合资企业或表外工具,与企业合作并扩大其业务规模。私募股权公司需要采取新的思维方式,这样他们才能成为优秀的合作伙伴。我确实认为,当我们开始看到这些新的创新金融模式时,将会出现一些转变。

PM:您认为他们会与多大规模的企业合作?

KY:他们将与财富 500 强公司合作。我们已经看到了布鲁克菲尔德与加州资源公司合作的一些例子投资 5 亿美元用于碳捕获和封存开发。西方石油公司和贝莱德还宣布成立合资企业。它们开始蔓延。我想我们还会看到更多这样的人。

总理:您的《外交事务》文章说私人投资还不够,至少目前还不够。我们将需要政府补贴。我们如何才能有信心将这些补贴分配到正确的地方?

KY:去年投资的资本中约有 25% 来自公共部门和公共补贴。私营部门确实将推动转型,但公共部门可以发挥非常重要的作用,使资本能够在我们没有看到市场发挥作用的领域摆脱旁观者的角色。公共部门需要认真考虑正确类型的补贴和支持,以将更多资本引入该领域。例如,显而易见的一件事是,历史上政府倾向于支持技术。某些技术有税收抵免,当然《投资削减法案》为许多技术提供了资助。您已经看到大量投资投入到这些新技术中,但为了真正看到这些数字的规模,我们需要看到市场。当政府开始说“我们怎样才能真正使整个市场起步?”时,政府需要采取更多的系统方法。如果没有绿色氢市场,我们如何填补买方和卖方之间的差距,以便为绿色氢、绿色氨或绿色液化天然气制定长期合同?”需要更多的系统方法政府采取措施使整个市场能够起步。

PM:政府采取系统方法是什么意思?

KY:可以说,“我会支持供给侧的补贴”。我将为氢提供税收抵免。”但是,如果绿色氢没有市场,那么,即使有政府资金投入,这些数字也不会允许它得到开发,因为没有市场没有人会购买绿色氢。供给和需求都需要平衡,我们需要政府在帮助创造市场方面发挥更大的作用,特别是对于没有价格点的新分子。一个耗资 50 亿美元的大型氢能项目需要长期合同来支付前期资本投资,但目前市场上还没有 20 年期的绿色氢能合同。这就是政府可以帮助补贴绿色氢的价格,或者在买家和卖家之间发挥作用,并支付绿色氢的买家和氢的卖家之间的差价,以支持绿色氢的需求。他们的项目的投资。

PM:您参加了 COP28。您对他们达成的协议有何看法?

KY:我是一个务实的人,我不得不说,我认为这对于我们所有希望看到世界转型的人来说是一个绝佳的机会。在我看来,达成开始减少化石燃料消耗的协议是一个巨大的成功。幕后工作展现了真正的领导力,我们达成这样的协议我并不感到惊讶。我认为我们正在取得更多进展,并以一种吸引工业界帮助解决问题的方式来实现这一目标。

原文链接/hartenergy

Quadrupling Energy Transition Financing and the Quest for Net Zero

McKinsey Partner Kassia Yanosek details private equity’s unique role in the climate transition, despite corporate uneasiness at partnering with firms, and the need to quadruple funding while government ramps up support.

McKinsey Partner Kassia Yanosek details private equity’s unique role in climate transition, despite corporate uneasiness at partnering with firms, the need to quadruple funding while government ramps up support. (Source: Shutterstock.com)

Hart Energy Senior Editor Patrick McGee spoke with McKinsey & Co. Partner Kassia Yanosek, who recently co-authored a piece in the journal Foreign Affairs about private finance’s role in the energy transition. As everyone from energy executives to climate activists awaits word on how 2023 spending on the energy transition compares to the $1.1 trillion spent globally in 2022, Yanosek took note of private sources of finance that are taking the initiative.

"…Renewable energy is really only impacting our overall carbon emissions by a couple of percentage points." Kassia Yanosek, Mckinsey & Co. 

The work of private equity has been an encouraging sign and can provide long-term financing other markets cannot. But she noted that this is just the beginning, and to meet climate goals, energy transition funding will need to quadruple.

Patrick McGee: Why are investors increasingly willing to spend on the transition to cleaner energy?

Kassia Yanosek: Investors look for major growth trends, and the energy transition is one of them. There are clear drivers that are going to back this massive amount of capital that’s needed to go into this transition energy system. McKinsey research recently showed that by 2050, we’re going need to more than double the amount of electricity demand in the world today. That’s going to require an incredible amount of capital. Investors see that opportunity. They also see this opportunity to invest in decarbonization because we are going to be decarbonizing our energy system. That was certainly one of the things that came out of COP28.

The transport industry is going to decarbonize. That means new fuels, new ways of creating new, cleaner molecules. That is why investors are putting money into the transition. Our numbers say that we need about $4 trillion a year to meet net zero by 2050. Some figures are even higher than that. When you see those kinds of dollars, that’s when investors start to line up.

PM: Energy transition investment has increased dramatically. It’s enough to make headlines. Will it be enough to reach zero emissions?

KY: Whether it’s $4 trillion or $5 trillion, the number is massive, and that’s the amount of capital that needed per year between now and 2050 to reach a decarbonized energy system. Today, a quarter of that is being spent. We’re going to need a lot more than we’re putting in today, and we’re at the beginning stages of that. Not only is investment going up, but we’re also seeing capital being formed in private capital pools and that is also going up. Last year, $160 billion was raised globally by private equity and infrastructure funds from the sovereign wealth funds and the pension funds, etc., for transition. Just to put it in perspective, that is about eight times the amount that was raised last year for oil and gas funds. Clearly, we’re seeing the owners of capital allocate capital [for] the transition, and we’re starting to see it play out, but there’s still a lot more that needs to be done.

PM: Can you say how much is going into which technologies and what does that say about the investors’ faith in a lot of these solutions, many of which are still unproven?

KY: The majority of that $1 trillion, 80% to 85% went to proven technologies, wind, solar and batteries and related technologies for electric vehicles. In our Foreign Affairs article, we call that shallow decarbonization because renewable energy is really only impacting our overall carbon emissions by a couple of percentage points. What’s really needed is more investment in what we call deep decarbonization. Deep decarbonization is some of the game changers that can transition significantly. Green hydrogen, for example, carbon capture and storage at scale, direct air capture, which is the ability to take carbon out of the atmosphere and capture it, much cleaner fuels getting down to like a zero-carbon fuel. Those are the types of technologies that we still are not yet seeing as attractive to investors at scale because they’re still new; because the markets don’t exist yet. They’re too expensive for investors to really see a return on their capital. That’s why investors are not yet going there, but they’re trying.

PM: There are so-called “brown” firms investing in green technologies. Are they serious, or are they just investing as a way to keep tabs on new technology and on the competition?

KY: My honest answer is that it’s an all of the above. There are some brown firms that are out way ahead of their peers. They’re typically the ones that are really well performing in their core business and have the ability to convince their investors to allocate some capital to transition. Occidental Petroleum is a great example. They’ve made a big splash with their low carbon ventures group and just announced a partnership with BlackRock to invest $500 million into their first direct air capture plant in the Permian Basin. Some of the equipment companies also are [investing] because they see that getting ahead of the market will position them very well. Baker Hughes is an example. They’re very much involved in transition businesses, whether that be gas related or hydrogen electrolyzers. Then you have companies like Exxon Mobil who have made big bets that they are mostly funding themselves. CO2 carbon capture is one of Exxon’s big focus areas, and they just acquired Denbury, which happens to have one of the most critical CO2 infrastructure assets, the CO2 pipeline in the Texas region. Those are a couple of examples, but there are certainly others that are saying, “I’m going to wait. I’m not going be a first mover,” and there’s many of those. It really runs the gamut.

PM: There are some oil and gas companies who have pulled back from their green investments. Can we take that as a sign that the technologies’ promise might be overblown?

KY: There is definitely a clear message that the public shareholders are telling energy companies when you look at the difference in value [and] valuation between the U.S. energy companies who have been a bit muted in their movements into the energy transition — at least in terms of big moves into, say, electric power and renewable power — versus the European firms which have made big forays into renewable energy and renewable power. There’s a huge valuation gap in between those. BP and Shell trade at a 45% to 50% discount, as of about a month ago, to their to their U.S. peers. If you look at the data of the U.S. versus the European firms, you see an inflection point where values start to diverge around 2019 when the European firms started to make these big bigger moves into cleaner energy. These energy companies that have decided to move very quickly in the transition, invested hard into power technologies which is not their competitive advantage — they’re oil and gas companies with oil and gas capabilities — and many of those assets also have much, much lower returns than their oil and gas business. Just by nature of the math, they’re going to be creating less value than their peers if they’re shifting all that capital into the transition businesses. So, I wouldn’t say that’s a sign that the promise of technology is overblown because they were actually investing in proven technologies, wind and solar proven technologies. It’s just that they weren’t the right owners of those assets.

Going forward, I think you’re going see energy companies focus much more on new energies that are much more aligned with their core business and their core understanding. Carbon capture, for example, you need to understand the geology in order to store that carbon. They’ve got that capability. Some are looking at geothermal, drilling into the earth. That requires geologic expertise and understanding. Hydrogen and other related new fuels require engineering capability and systems technologies that many of the downstream and upstream producers have. I think there’s going to be a shift to technologies where they’re the better owners of those technologies, and right now, those many of those technologies are still too nascent.

PM: Why do you see optimism for the transition in private capital markets?

KY: If you look at the capital that’s coming from pension funds and sovereign wealth funds, they are looking for long-dated assets to meet their liabilities. Many of the pension funds have been eyeing infrastructure assets in that particular asset class has certainly grown over the past 20 years. The energy transition fits very well into meeting those goals. So they’ve become very interested in investing in funds that are deploying into, say, the electrification trend, which is going to be long term. Solar and wind, for example, already are proven technologies and should throw off long-dated cash flows. So, I think that part of the optimism is just the long-term nature of this transition and how it’s going to match the liabilities that these funds need to address.

I also would say, and this is more on the riskier front, private equity is known historically to be at the epicenter of disruptions. Whenever an industry is disrupting, private equity is often there and can really create value because they can create growth in areas where they see an opportunity to pick out a technology or company and make it more efficient.

PM: Private equity is often vilified on Main Street and in the mainstream media, but you believe it can play a positive role in the energy transition. Can you describe that?

KY: Private equity, at least in the energy sector, is much more attuned to either just buying a company outright or backing a developer and that developer on Main Street is developing assets. What is changing is that private equity is now going to be starting to partner directly with corporates. That is a new role for private equity to play. Many corporates don’t trust private equity, [but] private equity is starting to partner in joint ventures or off-balance-sheet vehicles to work with corporates and scale their businesses. There is going to be a new mindset that private equity needs to take on so they can be great partners. I do think there will be some transition as we start to see these new innovative financial models.

PM: What size corporates do you think they will partner with?

KY: They’re going to be partnering with the Fortune 500. We already see some examples of that with Brookfield partnering with California Resources Corp. for a $500 million investment in carbon capture and storage development. Occidental and BlackRock also announced a joint venture. They are starting to spread. I think we’re going to see many more of them.

PM: Your Foreign Affairs article says private investments are not enough, at least not at the moment. We’re going to need government subsidies. How can we have confidence these subsidies will be allocated to the right places?

KY: About 25% of the capital that was invested last year came from public sector and public subsidies. The private sector is really going to be driving the transition, but the public sector has a really important role to play to enable capital to come off the sidelines in areas where we aren’t seeing the markets work. The public sector needs to be very thoughtful about the right types of subsidies and supports to bring more capital into the space. One thing that is apparent, for example, is that historically governments tend to support technologies. There are tax credits for certain technologies, certainly the Investment Reduction Act funded a lot of technologies. You’ve seen a lot of investment go into these new technologies, but in order to really see that those numbers scale we need to see a market. There needs to be more of a systems approach that governments take when they start to say, “How can we actually make this entire market get off the ground? If there is no market for green hydrogen, how do we fill the gap between the buyer and the seller in order to create long-term contracts for green hydrogen or green ammonia or green LNG?” There needs to be more of a systems approach that governments take to enable these entire markets to get off the ground.

PM: What do you mean by government taking a systems approach?

KY: You can say, “I’m going to support a subsidy on the supply side. I’m going provide a tax credit for hydrogen.” But if there is no market for that green hydrogen, then, even though it has government money coming into it, the numbers won’t allow it to get developed because there’s no nobody that’s going to buy the green hydrogen. You both need supply and demand to be balanced, and we need the government to play a bigger role in helping to create the markets, particularly for new molecules where there is no price point for them. A large hydrogen project that costs $5 billion is going to need long term contracts to pay for the capital investment up front, but today there’s no 20-year contract for green hydrogen that they can get in the market. That’s where government can help come in to potentially subsidize that price of green hydrogen or to play a role in between a buyer and seller and pay the difference between what the buyer of that green hydrogen and the seller that hydrogen needs in order to backstop the investment of their project.

PM: You were at COP28. What do you think about the agreement that they came to?

KY: I’m a practical person, and I have to say, I think it’s an amazing opportunity for all of us that want to see the world transition. The fact that there was an agreement to begin reduction of the consumption of fossil fuels is, in my view, a huge success. The work behind the scenes shows real leadership, and I was not surprised that we got to the agreement that we did. I think that we’re on track for more progress and to do it in a way that’s bringing industry in to help solve the problem.