Microvast Holdings announces departure of chief financial officer
Brookfield Renewable Partners LP reported its second-quarter 2025 earnings, revealing a mixed financial performance. The company posted an earnings per share (EPS) of -$0.22, missing the forecast of -$0.1584, but delivered a significant revenue surprise with actual revenues reaching $1.69 billion, far exceeding the anticipated $1.02 billion. Despite the revenue beat, the company’s stock fell 5.34% in pre-market trading, reflecting investor concerns over the EPS miss. According to InvestingPro data, the company maintains a market capitalization of $17.27 billion and has demonstrated strong revenue growth of 14.71% over the last twelve months.
Key Takeaways
- Brookfield Renewable reported a revenue surprise of 65.69%.
- The company’s EPS fell short of forecasts by 38.89%.
- Stock dropped by 5.34% in pre-market trading.
- Strong performance in the hydroelectric and distributed energy segments.
- $4.7 billion in available liquidity supports future growth.
Company Performance
Brookfield Renewable demonstrated robust growth in its core operations, with funds from operations (FFO) increasing by 10% year-over-year to $371 million. The hydroelectric segment saw a remarkable 50% increase in FFO, while the distributed energy segment grew nearly 40%. The company continues to leverage its diversified energy portfolio, including hydro, wind, solar, nuclear, and battery storage, to strengthen its market position.
Financial Highlights
- Revenue: $1.69 billion, up significantly from expectations.
- Earnings per share: -$0.22, below the forecast of -$0.1584.
- Funds from operations: $371 million, a 10% year-over-year increase.
- FFO per unit: $0.56.
Earnings vs. Forecast
Brookfield Renewable’s EPS of -$0.22 was below the forecasted -$0.1584, resulting in a negative surprise of 38.89%. In contrast, the company delivered a substantial revenue surprise, with actual revenues of $1.69 billion surpassing the forecast by 65.69%. This discrepancy between EPS and revenue performance highlights operational strengths but also points to areas needing improvement.
Market Reaction
Following the earnings announcement, Brookfield Renewable’s stock experienced a decline of 5.34% in pre-market trading. The stock’s current price of $27.18 reflects investor apprehension regarding the EPS miss, despite the revenue beat. This movement places the stock closer to its 52-week low of $19.29, indicating potential volatility in investor sentiment.
Outlook & Guidance
Looking ahead, Brookfield Renewable is targeting over 10% growth in FFO per unit for the year, with expectations of delivering 12-15% long-term total returns. The company plans to commission 8 gigawatts of new capacity in 2025 and anticipates increased M&A activity in the U.S. renewable market. The strategic focus remains on technologies critical to grid reliability, including hydro, nuclear, and battery storage.
Executive Commentary
CEO Conor Teske emphasized the company’s strategic focus, stating, "Batteries are the fastest growing technology within our platform today." He also highlighted the challenges in energy procurement, noting, "The procurement of power is now undoubtedly the bottleneck on the critical path to growth for their cloud and AI businesses."
Risks and Challenges
- Potential supply chain disruptions could affect project timelines.
- Market saturation in key segments may limit growth opportunities.
- Regulatory changes in energy policies could impact operations.
- Fluctuations in energy demand due to macroeconomic factors.
- Competition from emerging renewable technologies.
Q&A
During the earnings call, analysts inquired about the implications of the PJM capacity auction and the company’s safe harbor tax credit strategy. Discussions also covered opportunities in nuclear development and the potential of the battery storage market, underscoring the company’s strategic priorities in expanding its renewable energy footprint.
Full transcript - Brookfield Renewable Partners LP (BEP) Q2 2025:
Conference Operator: Thank you for standing by and welcome to the Brookfield Renewable Second Quarter twenty twenty five Results Conference Call and Webcast. At this time, all participants are in a listen only mode. After the speakers’ presentation, there will be a question and answer session. To ask a question during this session, you’ll need to press 11 on your telephone. If your question has been answered and you’d like to remove yourself from the queue, press 11 again.
As a reminder, today’s program is being recorded. And now, I’d like to introduce your host for today’s program, Conor Teske, CEO. Please go ahead, sir.
Conor Teske, CEO, Brookfield Renewable: Thank you, operator. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us for our second 2025 conference call. Before we begin, we would like to remind you that a copy of our news release, investor supplement and letter to unitholders can be found on our website. We also want to remind you that we may make forward looking statements on this call. These statements are subject to known and unknown risks and our future results may differ materially.
For more information, you are encouraged to review our regulatory filings available on SEDAR, EDGAR and on our website. On today’s call, we will provide a review of our second quarter performance. And then Wyatt Hartley, Co President of Brookfield Renewable and Head of our North American business, will discuss our recently announced Hydro Framework Agreement with Google and how our strategic operating portfolio and deep capabilities across renewable technologies has positioned us as the partner of choice to the largest buyers of power globally. Lastly, Patrick will conclude our remarks by discussing our operating results and the strong financing environment that we are seeing for our business and our assets today. Following our comments, we look forward to taking your questions.
We had a successful quarter, delivering strong financial results and executing on our business plans and growth initiatives. Our robust operating results were driven by our large hydro fleet, which is increasingly strategic in the current environment and the benefits of our development activities where over the past twelve months, we have commissioned 7.7 gigawatts of new renewable energy capacity globally. One highlight in the quarter was the strong results from our nuclear services business, Westinghouse, as the momentum for nuclear power continues to build with Westinghouse well placed to benefit from continued growth in the sector given its global leadership position. Looking at the broader market, we recently received additional clarity on policy changes in The United States with the signing of the One Big Beautiful Bill. And while we have been preparing our business for changes in tax credit eligibility for U.
S. Renewables projects for some time, we are now in a position to execute with a greater level of confidence. With that, we began deploying a safe harboring strategy that will secure credit eligibility for nearly all of our projects in The United States through to the 2029. While doing so, we are staying true to our approach to development, focusing on ensuring we have strong line of sight on both our costs and revenues for each project with a particular focus on minimizing the capital at risk while protecting our ability to deliver our target returns. Most importantly, the outlook for global and diversified business like ours remain exceptionally strong, driven by the most robust energy demand growth we have seen in decades.
We continue to see a significant supply demand imbalance for energy throughout the regions in which we operate, And it is becoming increasingly clear that solving this imbalance will require substantial expansion of many forms of energy generation. But with low cost, quick to market renewables technologies well positioned to provide much of this needed build out in addition to other critical technologies that will support grid reliability. Our business is well positioned to help meet this exponential demand and support grid reliability with our over two thirty gigawatt pipeline of projects, which includes significant battery storage solutions, our global fleet of operating hydro facilities and through Westinghouse, our leading nuclear service business. Turning back to our performance during the quarter. We delivered strong financial results and executed on our commercial initiatives and growth plans, all while maintaining the strength of our balance sheet.
We delivered FFO per unit that was up 10% year over year and continue to expect to deliver on our 10% plus FFO per unit growth target for the year. We were successful in advancing our commercial initiatives, securing contracts to deliver an incremental 4,300 gigawatt hours per year of generation in addition to signing the Hydro Framework Agreement. We progressed our development activities and commissioned approximately 2.1 gigawatts of new renewable energy capacity in the quarter and anticipate bringing on approximately eight gigawatts in 2025, which will be a record for our business. We have also continued to execute on our asset recycling initiatives. And since the start of the second quarter, we sold assets for expected proceeds of approximately $1,500,000,000 or $400,000,000 net to Brookfield Renewable, all at strong returns.
Based on our advanced pipeline, we expect total asset sales proceeds in 2025 to exceed last year with returns at or above our targets. Illustrative of the increasing and recurring nature of asset monetizations as a highly accretive way to fund our future growth. The outlook for our business remains robust, driven by exceptionally strong demand for power that will necessitate the development of all forms of energy. With our globally diversified portfolio across hydro, wind, solar, nuclear and battery storage, we see strong potential to deepen relationships with the world’s largest buyers of power. And this gives us confidence that for our business, the best is yet to come.
With that, we will now turn it over to Wyatt to speak to our recently announced Hydro Framework Agreement with Google and how our strategic operating portfolio and deep capabilities across renewables technologies has positioned us as the partner of choice to the largest buyers of power globally.
Wyatt Hartley, Co-President, Head of North American Business, Brookfield Renewable: Thank you, Conor, and good morning, everyone. This past quarter, we reinforced our position as the energy solutions partner of choice to the global technology players, with the signing of a first of its kind agreement with Google to deliver up to three gigawatts of hydroelectric capacity across The United States. This framework agreement follows on our landmark framework agreement with Microsoft that we signed last year to deliver over 10.5 gigawatts of renewable energy capacity and is a testament to our unique capabilities while also demonstrating our credibility with the largest buyers of power in the world. The agreement is also notable as it reflects a trend in how the hyperscalers are procuring power. Historically, they were focused on contracting new build wind and solar.
However, in the current environment, we have seen them extend their procurement of power to include hydro and nuclear generation at scale as a complement to their continued strong demand for low cost and quick to market wind and solar. We have already signed the first two contracts under the Google framework agreement for six seventy megawatts of capacity from our Holtwood and Safe Harbor facilities in Pennsylvania, securing twenty year contracts that deliver strong all in prices and provide a near term path to up financing, which will generate significant proceeds to deploy into further accretive growth. We also have another 300 megawatts of hydro capacity we are presenting to Google this year that we expect to contract at similarly attractive terms that should provide additional up financing opportunities. For the remaining capacity under the framework agreement, we will explore additional contracting opportunities within our existing hydro fleet as well as to pursue potential new hydro investments. Stepping back, as Conor spoke to in his remarks, there is an incredible growth in energy demand that will require an any and all solution to deliver the electricity needed in the market.
At the same time, there is also an increasing requirement to match the needs of the grid with the right mix of technologies to maintain reliability. In light of this, we continue to expand our capabilities in low cost wind and solar generation, while also placing emphasis on critical technologies that enable and support broader development of these renewables, namely hydro, nuclear and batteries. By continuing to grow our capabilities in these technologies, we are further positioning ourselves for large scale partnerships that deliver the needs of our customers, while at the same time earning strong risk adjusted returns in line with our expectations. Furthering our strategy of growing in critical technologies to provide clean baseload power to support the grid, in July, we reached an agreement to invest up to $1,000,000,000 to acquire an approximately 15% incremental stake in our Colombian hydro platform, Isahen. This accretive transaction enables us to increase our interest in an irreplaceable fleet of primarily hydro assets that generates 20 fourseven baseload power and delivers significant, stable and contracted cash flows.
The business generates almost 20% of Columbia’s electricity and we continue to identify opportunities to drive performance improvements by leveraging our commercial relationships, marketing expertise and building out incremental renewable generation in the country. The investment is anticipated to be approximately 2% accretive to our FFO in 2026. In addition to our growing hydro fleet, we own Westinghouse, which services approximately two thirds of the world’s nuclear power fleet and whose technology is the basis for approximately half the operating nuclear reactors globally, providing us exposure to another critical technology required to meet the needs of today’s grid. Beyond Westinhouse core fuel and reactor services business, Westinhouse provides design and engineering for new build reactors without taking on certain nuclear specific new build risks. The U.
S. Government recently announced executive orders to significantly grow nuclear capacity in the country, and Westinhouse, as The US nuclear champion with the most advanced utility scale reactor technology that is operating today, is well positioned to help deliver on these objectives. Lastly, in the first quarter, we closed our acquisition of Nayeon, which significantly expanded our battery capabilities and made us one of the largest operators and developers of battery storage solutions globally. This enhanced the suite of energy solutions we can offer to our customers and is leading to more opportunities across our business, both in terms of M and A opportunities but also within our existing fleet. Going forward, we will continue to be active investing in the critical technologies that are required to support growing energy demand and the reliability of the grid, in addition
Unknown Speaker, Brookfield Renewable: to low cost wind and solar, and expect to expand our partnerships with the largest buyers of power on large scale framework agreements like the ones we executed with Google and Microsoft to date, as well as on a project by project basis. With that,
Wyatt Hartley, Co-President, Head of North American Business, Brookfield Renewable: I will pass it on to Patrick to discuss our operating results and financial position.
Patrick, CFO, Brookfield Renewable: Thanks, Wyatt, and good morning to everyone on the call. Our business performed well this quarter, delivering funds from operations of $371,000,000 or $0.56 per unit, an increase of 10 year over year, driven by strong hydro generation and execution of our growth initiatives over the past year, which more than offset the impact of asset sales we completed in the last year. Our Hydroelectric segment delivered strong growth with FFO up over 50% from the prior year on strong performance from our U. S. And Colombian fleets with hydrology that was above the long term average.
The outperformance reflects a rebound from a challenging prior year for hydrology and is in line with our expectation of a reversion to the mean over the long term. The strong performance for our hydros bodes well for our overall results in 2025 and going into 2026, given the typical multi year cycle we see in the hydrology of our fleet. Our wind and solar segments performed well with FFO essentially flat compared to the prior year, as newly commissioned capacity and the closing of our investment in National Grid’s renewables business in The U. S. During the quarter was offset by lower FFO due to asset dispositions and gains on the sale of development assets in the prior year.
Our Distributed Energy, Storage and Sustainable Solutions segments delivered strong performance, with FFO up almost 40% year over year, driven by strong results from Westinghouse as the business continues to benefit from the growing global demand for nuclear energy. Turning to our financial position, we ended the quarter with $4,700,000,000 of available liquidity across the business, providing strong financial flexibility for the franchise. Our balance sheet continues to be top tier in the sector and we remain committed to a prudent financing approach, enabling us to pursue growth opportunistically. In light of the exceptionally robust demand for our assets and businesses we are seeing today in the capital markets, we continue to proactively pull forward financings across our business, including a number of up financing opportunities. This should provide additional liquidity earlier than expected to fund accretive growth across the franchise.
Year to date, we have successfully completed $19,000,000,000 of financings across the business, extending maturities and optimizing our capital structure with a couple of noteworthy financings in the quarter. In June, we were successful issuing CAD250 million of thirty year hybrid notes at the tightest corporate hybrid new issue spread ever in Canada, in an offering that was several times oversubscribed. The issuance aligns with our strategy of conservatively accessing the market to optimize our capital structure as our cash flows increase. Also during the quarter, we successfully executed Brookfield Renewable’s largest ever project financing, raising EUR6.3 billion for our offshore wind development project in Poland. Lastly, we further demonstrated the strong demand for our high quality assets, raising a $435,000,000 long term fixed rate private placement for a strategic U.
S. Hydro asset at our lowest spread in five years for this type of financing. This again was an offering that was multiple times oversubscribed. These financings are indicative of the strong support from lenders for our de risked infrastructure assets and indicates how our significant access to capital continues to be an enduring competitive advantage. In closing, we remain focused on delivering 12% to 15% long term total returns for our investors, while remaining disciplined allocators of capital and leveraging our strengths to access unique opportunities in the most attractive technologies and regions.
On behalf of the Board and management, we thank all our unitholders and shareholders for their ongoing support. We are excited about Brookfield Renewable’s future and look forward to updating you on our progress throughout the year, including at our upcoming Investor Day in Toronto on September 25. That concludes our formal remarks for today’s call. Thank you for joining us this morning. And with that, I’ll pass it back to our operator for questions.
Conference Operator: Certainly. And our first question comes from the line of Nelson Ng from RBC Capital Markets. Your question please.
Nelson Ng, Analyst, RBC Capital Markets: Great, thanks and congrats on a strong quarter. So first question is like I think it’s already well known that there’s a big demand for power and the lack of supply. But in light of the results from the recent PJM option and the high capacity payments, are you able to accelerate the, pace of development, in that area? Or are you making any changes in The US and are you able to further kind of leverage your footprints in that region?
Conor Teske, CEO, Brookfield Renewable: Good morning and thanks for the question, Nelson. In terms of what we saw recently in the capacity auction in PGM, we would simply say it’s indicative of that supply demand imbalance that we’re seeing in most of the regions we operate around the world. Just with the capacity auction, the results get published, creates a really formal portrayal of a dynamic we’ve been seeing on the ground in a number of places that we think is going to continue for years to come. In terms of how we leverage our existing position and look to pull things forward, two comments to be made there. Make no mistake, in this market where there is a supply demand imbalance, the shortage is not capital, the shortage is not demand, the shortage is having available to build projects.
And we are tackling this three ways. One, everything we can we are pulling forward as quickly as possible. That has very much been true for a couple of years now and we’ll look to continue to be true for the foreseeable future. Secondly, we will continue to use our M and A capabilities and our access to capital to add more projects and more pipeline in the regions where we are seeing the greatest amount of demand. And then thirdly, I would highlight our framework agreements and partnerships with the largest buyers of power around the world, Because what those partnerships allow us to do is get a very intimate knowledge of where those buyers of power, where their future needs are.
And really what it does is it gives us a hunting license, if you will, to either develop or acquire with greater confidence in regions where we essentially know there is a backstop level of demand. And therefore, we’re already pulling everything forward as fast as possible, but we’re looking to use the growth levers as our franchise to look to do more in those markets where we see that supply demand imbalance persisting in the longer term.
Nelson Ng, Analyst, RBC Capital Markets: Great. Thanks, Connor. So just to follow-up on that, I noticed in your development pipeline that the amount of projects being commissioned in North America in 2025 is, I think, roughly 2.7 gigawatts. That reduces a little bit to 2.4 in ’26 and then it more than doubles to 5.4 gigawatts in 2027. Is that just purely timing or are there kind of other forces at work in terms of that profile?
Conor Teske, CEO, Brookfield Renewable: That’s purely timing. Our development pipeline is made up of I’ll start and if Wyatt wants to add anything he can, but our pipelines that we produce in our supplemental are really backed by list of specific projects that have various interconnection and COD dates. Make no mistake, if you were to draw a trend line across our North American region, it is very consistently kind of up into the right, but the specifics of one year to the next are based on the individual underlying projects and when they’re going to come online.
Patrick, CFO, Brookfield Renewable: Okay. Got it.
Nelson Ng, Analyst, RBC Capital Markets: And then just one last question. Just based on your discussion with the big tech companies and big hyperscalers, like how do they balance the need for baseload versus intermittent renewable energy?
Conor Teske, CEO, Brookfield Renewable: The large technology companies are undoubtedly the largest buyers of power and are certainly ones who are adding the incremental marginal demand due to the growth of AI and the growth of the data center fleet around the world, but particularly in The US. And therefore, they, without a doubt are looking to secure as much generation as possible. And while we often talk about them as a specific industry, the point we would make is the demand is broad based. It’s driven first and foremost by the tech companies, but we’re seeing this across all segments of the economy. The second point we would make is we are seeing an absolutely growing sophistication and increased demand for things beyond what I will say pay as produced generation.
And we absolutely encourage this and think it puts Brookfield in a fantastic situation. We’re seeing more demand for 20 fourseven power. We’re increasingly seeing contracts that used to be pay as produced generation. Now the off takers want the power and the RECs. Increasingly now we’re seeing the contracts include the capacity component that comes with some of these revenues and some of these assets.
And all of that plays to our strengths given our diversity across technologies and in particular our large flexible operating base that can be mixed with, I’ll call it vanilla wind and solar to meet these evolving demands of the market. So absolutely it is increasing. We actually encourage it and view it as a very important way that Brookfield Renewable will continue to differentiate itself.
Nelson Ng, Analyst, RBC Capital Markets: Great. Thanks, Connor. I’ll leave it there.
Conference Operator: Thank you. And our next question comes from the line of Sean Steuart from T. B. Cowen. Your question please.
Sean Steuart, Analyst, T.B. Cowen: Thank you. Good morning everyone. First question, Connor, you touched on feeling pretty good about your U. S. Pipeline’s tax credit eligibility through 2029.
And I guess the question is, I suppose that’s the read relative to the reconciliation bill. Do you have any thoughts on Trump’s executive order and if any potential changes to FIAC criteria might change the parameters of tax credit eligibility for your pipeline?
Conor Teske, CEO, Brookfield Renewable: So we continue to monitor the review that’s ongoing. We feel very comfortable with our position and perhaps more importantly, if anything unexpected came out of that review, we are extremely confident that we are as well positioned as anyone else or best positioned to leverage our global supply chain and our different relationships to evolve as needed. And we stand here very confidently that we will be able to secure tax credit eligibility for essentially the entirety of our U. S. Pipeline out through the end of the decade.
Sean, I don’t know if this was part of your question, but after you mentioned we focus on out to 2029, the important thing within our business to recognize is, as we have seen in recent years, there is due to the supply imbalance we are seeing in the market, we are able to pass through any changes in construction costs up or down, whether that be CapEx costs, whether that be the inclusion or removal of tax credits, whether that be funding costs, we’ve been able to push that through to the end customer by changing the price of the PPA. We’ve been able to push through cost decrease as well as cost increases always well preserving our development margin. The one place that we’re very, very constructive is because of the visibility out to 2029 that gives the market and ourselves as a developer more than enough time to include any price increases as needed for projects out more than five years away now. And really what it gives us confidence is within our U. S.
Business, we’ll be able to preserve our development margin for the foreseeable future.
Sean Steuart, Analyst, T.B. Cowen: Thank you for that detail. That’s useful. Second question for you, Conor, for Wyatt. To fulfill the full three gigawatts under the Google framework agreement, you touched on it would require some M and A. And I’m wondering if you can speak to the hydro M and A environment in The U.
S. Right now and how you expect to navigate that opportunity set going forward?
Conor Teske, CEO, Brookfield Renewable: So we’re actually seeing the hydro market after, I would say, an extended period of inactivity becoming more and more liquid. And obviously hydro are scarce assets, but it’s also hydro operating capabilities are scarce as well. And we’ve been buyers, owners, operators of hydros for four decades. And really, I’ll use the same word again, what our arrangement with Google does is it gives us a hunting license, if you will, to pursue opportunities in hydro when they become available, when they fit the parameters of that framework, we can pursue those opportunities with confidence. And one thing we would highlight is there is the opportunity but not the obligation to deliver those incremental megawatts.
So we will continue to be disciplined. But I would say it’s certainly another competitive advantage for us as we look to grow our strategy.
Wyatt Hartley, Co-President, Head of North American Business, Brookfield Renewable: And Sean, it’s Wyatt here. The only thing I would add is, look, like with that additional capacity, it could be that it’s all fulfilled with our existing fleet. We do have that capacity that is available to contract. Really, it’s just a matter of, is it in the right region that Google would want it as an off take? So it’s not to say that it requires us to do M and A to fulfill it.
It’s just we have the optionality, right? And it’s really predicated on meeting the needs of Google and working with them over the next number of years to to to figure that out. But we have the option of the existing fleet or to use it for for m and a.
Sean Steuart, Analyst, T.B. Cowen: Got it. Okay. Thanks, Wyatt. That’s all I have for now, guys.
Conference Operator: Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Mark Jarvi from CIBC. Your question please.
Mark Jarvi, Analyst, CIBC: Good morning everyone. Just coming back to the conversation around PJM, the pricing signals are very encouraging, but it also represents the fact where it’s harder to get assets through the interconnection queue in Permian. So I’m just thinking how you guys are adapting some of the challenges in The U. S. Market and talking to your large customers.
Are you starting to prioritize other regions where transmission, procurement, ability to build is easier? Like, you shifting to places like Texas where some of the gigawatt scale data center complexes are trying to push forward?
Conor Teske, CEO, Brookfield Renewable: Hi, Mark. Thanks for the question. If I could perhaps answer back to you, the comment I would say is we continue it’s not that we’re starting, we continue to take into account speed of connection into our development activities and our interactions with our customers. Take a market like PJM, I know it’s a little bit dated now, but we bought a platform Urban Grid a number of years ago purely because it had such preferential interconnection queue positions in an increasingly congested market. So I would say it’s not a realization of a problem and a reaction to pursue elsewhere, it’s a recognition of a dynamic that has been ongoing and will continue to exist and simply including that in both how we grow inorganically through M and A and how we look to develop as we look to meet the growing needs of our customers.
It’s something we’ve been doing for years and that we’ll continue to do. Make no mistake about it, you can’t start a project in some markets right now and expect it to COD for a customer anytime in the near term.
Mark Jarvi, Analyst, CIBC: Something like the Urban and Grid platform, is that something you can continue to lean on? Or have you sort of not exhausted, but largely taken advantage of their preferential interconnection queue and siding positions? Or is that a business that continues to create more upside and competitive advantage in the PGM market for now?
Conor Teske, CEO, Brookfield Renewable: Even less specific to urban grid, I think buying businesses and development platforms that take into account and have really good knowledge of how interconnection grids work, turned into pulling assets out of the ground. Those capabilities are recurring. We felt in that example that we were buying an underappreciated asset because of their existing connections, but that and our other platforms continue to add pipeline in the highest value markets across The United States. And that’s what gives us that pipeline of being able to pull multiple thousand megawatts out of the ground each year. It’s really based on decisions and positions that we took years ago.
Mark Jarvi, Analyst, CIBC: Okay. And then maybe turning to Europe, it seems like the cost decline on batteries and solar’s created some tailwinds on the economic case for deployment there. We’ve heard some other developers ramp up activities. Just with Nao and other platforms you have in Europe, are you able grow faster on the organic side or is M and A something you’d have to look to more in Europe to take advantage of potential economic tailwind there?
Conor Teske, CEO, Brookfield Renewable: The comment about batteries, battery CapEx costs have gone down more than 60% in the last twenty four months, while at the same time increasing renewable penetration has created the need for more grid stabilizing services. You have a dynamic where costs are going down at the same time as revenues are going up in almost every market around the world. And therefore, the commercial case, the economic case for batteries is pretty incredible today in most markets we look at. And therefore across every single development platform at Brookfield, we have implemented a battery strategy over the last twelve months. We are of course doing things to supplement that, looking at either battery acquisitions or platforms that do focus on energy storage.
And that was undoubtedly a key feature of the acquisition of NaoN, which is the largest utility scale battery developer in the world. The one point we would highlight about Neon is while they are a French company headquartered and we privatized them off the French Stock Exchange, they are a very global developer in terms of where their operations are. And we’re certainly leveraging that to drive organic growth in areas outside of Europe as well.
Nelson Ng, Analyst, RBC Capital Markets: So if you
Mark Jarvi, Analyst, CIBC: had to say today where you think the best rate of change in terms of growth on batteries can really accelerate development activities or capital deployment activities, how would you rank to the markets that are really starting to lead your focus right now?
Conor Teske, CEO, Brookfield Renewable: If I could frame it slightly differently, I think this will be helpful. Batteries are the fastest growing technology within our platform today. In terms of areas where we are seeing batteries deployed at scale, candidly, I think The U. S. Would probably still be number one for us.
But we continue to see opportunities in other markets, in particular areas where there’s very high irradiation and very high renewables penetration. So parts of The U. S. Obviously fit that bill, Australia obviously fits that bill, Places in Europe, storage is increasingly becoming of interest in Southern Europe. The other place that I would highlight is we’re actually seeing growing number of opportunities in The Middle East as well.
Mark Jarvi, Analyst, CIBC: And given that economic case, would batteries be at the top end of your target IRR range for now?
Conor Teske, CEO, Brookfield Renewable: Yes, absolutely. Thanks, Ron. It probably won’t stay there forever. But right now, the returns on batteries are very attractive.
Jon Winhelm, Analyst, UBS: Okay. Thanks, Ron.
Conference Operator: Thank you. And our next question comes from the line of Mark Strouse from JPMorgan. Your question, please.
Unknown Speaker, Brookfield Renewable: Yes, good morning. Thank you very much for taking our questions. Just I wanted to ask a couple of points on your safe harbor business, Connor. Just given kind of the July 7 executive order and potential changes to safe harbor, we’ll find out what treasury says here in the next couple of weeks hopefully. I’m curious, you talk about you’re safe harboring nearly all of your U.
S. Projects through year end ’twenty nine. Are you able to say how much of that was safe harbored in 2024 and prior? Just our understanding is that the potential rule change is going to be for 2025 and beyond safe harbors, if there’s going to be any change. So kind of breaking that down.
And then secondarily, how are you thinking about that in 2025, kind of weighing spending money now to lock in your credits to the extent that you can maximize that. But on the other hand, looking to overspend in the event that rule changes are draconian. Thank you.
Conor Teske, CEO, Brookfield Renewable: So, a few things to unpack there. What I would say is in terms of our safe harbor strategy for our U. S. Platform, as mentioned, we have an expectation that we will be able to safe harbor almost all of it. The vast majority of that is done.
I can’t tell you a specific as of what date, but the vast majority of it is already completed. And some of the components of our pipeline where it’s not completed are things that maybe don’t need safe harboring, I. E. Some of our battery projects and things like that, which had more favorable treatment under the latest rules. In terms of your comment just around the process used to execute our safe harboring strategy.
The point we would make there is we obviously want to remain very true to our approach of only putting capital in the ground when we can lock in both revenues and costs at the same time that has served us very well across cycles and we want to stay true to that. So when we look to execute this safe harbor strategy, we look to do it first and foremost by using the off-site on-site physical work test approach and only secondly by pulling forward CapEx. And therefore, the way we do that only requires a modest amount of of CapEx than it otherwise would have. It’s in the grand scheme of our total organic development spend, the cost of safe harboring the incremental cost of of pulling forward CapEx to safe harbor these projects is not particularly material.
Nelson Ng, Analyst, RBC Capital Markets: Very helpful. Thank you.
Conference Operator: Thank you. And our next question comes from the line of Jon Winhelm from UBS. Your question please.
Jon Winhelm, Analyst, UBS: Yeah, thanks so much for taking the questions, Seth. I would just be interested in hearing your thoughts on what the key milestones are over the next year for nuclear development, things we should keep an eye on for the Westinghouse business? Thanks.
Conor Teske, CEO, Brookfield Renewable: So in terms of the Westinghouse business, and perhaps I’ll start and then Wyatt, the developments in The U. S. Are certainly the most interesting. Perhaps hand to you. But the way to think about our Westinghouse business is when we made the investment, we really think of it as two components.
One, it has an existing product services and technical capabilities to the existing nuclear operating fleet around the world. And that provides incredibly long term stable inflation linked cash flows as nuclear reactors simply run, refuel, refurbish, lifetime extensions, things like that. And all of that is of course trending in the right direction right now given the existing nuclear fleet around the world. What is the new dynamic that has accelerated in the last three to four years is new build nuclear. And the joy for Westinghouse is it plays an absolute leadership role in that activity as well.
That’s new build of large reactors, SMRs or even micro reactors as well. And what we’re seeing around the world is governments and corporates increasingly looking to large scale nuclear to meet their electricity and their baseload demands. And in particular, we’re seeing that activity most dramatic, would say, in Europe and The United States. And what you saw in our results this quarter is while the ongoing business, the core services business of Westinghouse is very, very stable and growing as we do more Westinghouse activities related to the growth of new nuclear that will provide significant upsides in our financial results as they execute on some of those types of activities. And it was certainly growth of new nuclear in Europe that drove the successful outperformance this quarter.
In terms of key milestones, Wyatt, I’ll hand to you, but I do think that the one to look for is growth in The United States as the government has been very vocal about their intention to start the build of 10 new reactors before the end of the decade with Westinghouse as The U. S. Nuclear technology and the global champion, it certainly looks to be on the front foot of that. And we would expect that demand to come from both governments and from corporates, which is probably the most notable inflection change we’re seeing in the industry. Wyatt, anything you’d add to that?
Wyatt Hartley, Co-President, Head of North American Business, Brookfield Renewable: Look, I would just reemphasize that last point about The US. As Conor mentioned, we’re seeing very meaningful demand on a global basis. Westinghouse has made very good progress in Europe as an example where we’re advancing projects in Poland. There’s very forward momentum in Bulgaria, we have a project or we have our underlying technologies being used in The Czech Republic. There is very good progress on a global basis, but as Connor mentioned in The US is where we see a very meaningful focus out of the current administration.
Recently, there was an executive order that was issued where with the goal of starting construction, as Connor mentioned on 10 gigawatt scale reactors by the end of the decade. And really where that positions Westinhouse is probably the most credible provider of that underlying technology is it really positions Westinhouse very meaningfully to benefit from that. As you may have seen around the energy innovation summit that was recently held in Pennsylvania where President Trump and the Senator of Pennsylvania attended, the focus around those 10 large scale gigawatt reactors is critical to the administration’s goal of being a leader in AI. So from that perspective, the business as well as the shareholders being both Brookfield and Cameco, our partner in the investment are working very closely with the various stakeholders and you can imagine that’s a mix of government, that’s a mix of utilities as well as the offtakes and primarily the hyperscalers. But we are working very meaningfully to be able to bring forward something in the very near term that should give you a sense of what that could translate to in terms of Westinhouse and then the broader benefit to Brookfield.
Nelson Ng, Analyst, RBC Capital Markets: Really appreciate the color. Be well.
Conference Operator: Thank you. And our next question comes from the line of Jessica Hoyle from Scotiabank. Your question please.
Jessica Hoyle, Analyst, Scotiabank: Good morning. Thanks so much for taking my questions. So just to start, you touched on this a little bit, but just given the CapEx increases that we’re seeing from the tech companies, how have discussions regarding new facilities or contractual frameworks changed in recent months?
Conor Teske, CEO, Brookfield Renewable: Perhaps the thing that is most notable to us, we’re going to sound like a broken record, is the numbers and the quantums and the demand simply continues to go up. But maybe there’s two or three things to highlight. One, we’re seeing much more increased appetite for new technologies beyond just wind and solar. Our hydro framework is certainly illustrative of that. And no doubt in relation to the previous question, the conversations around nuclear are certainly accelerating.
The other point that is really showing up out of these conversations is the importance that the large tech companies, the hyperscalers are putting on broader relationships. Make no mistake that the procurement of power is now undoubtedly the bottleneck on the critical path to growth for their cloud and AI businesses. And they don’t they increasingly want to look to derisk that growth path by partnering with the largest and most capable counterparties. And therefore, when we talk about something like our hydro framework with Google, while the framework in itself is exciting, it is important to recognize that it is simply one component of an increasingly broad and integrated relationship that spans wind, solar. Have retail power agreements with some of the tech companies.
Those relationships are becoming much larger and much more integrated. That’s probably the biggest change we’ve seen in recent months.
Jessica Hoyle, Analyst, Scotiabank: Thanks for that. And then can you talk a little bit about whether the changes in tax credits have altered the M and A market for renewable developers specifically in The US?
Conor Teske, CEO, Brookfield Renewable: It’s an interesting question because we highlight that we completed a transaction earlier this year acquiring a platform off National Grid in The United States that we’re absolutely thrilled about and really reinforces some of the messages we’ve been making on this call about buying high quality developers with advanced pipelines in the key regions around The United States. What’s interesting is M and A activity in The U. S. Has been a little bit subdued year to date. And we would chalk that up mostly just to some of the market noise and uncertainty around the timing of new regulation and tax regimes and executive orders and reviews, we very much expect there to be a very significant increase in M and A activity within the power space and the renewable power space in The United States over the next twelve months.
We see huge demands for power, which means huge demands for CapEx, which many of the existing platforms very simply don’t have access to capital to fund. And therefore, we do see a pretty large pipeline of M and A developing that we are certainly excited to review and participate in when it makes sense for our business.
Jessica Hoyle, Analyst, Scotiabank: Appreciate the color.
Conference Operator: Thank you. This does conclude the question and answer session of today’s program. I’d like to hand the program back to Conor Teske for any further remarks.
Conor Teske, CEO, Brookfield Renewable: Thank you very much for joining our call and your interest and support of Brookfield Renewable. We look forward to updating you on our Q3 results in three months time, but hopefully we’ll speak to you at our Investor Day at the September. Thank you and have a great day.
Conference Operator: Thank you, ladies and gentlemen, for your participation in today’s conference. This does conclude the program. You may now disconnect. Good day.
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