Lower Wind Speeds Hit Ørsted's Earnings

File Photo: Ørsted
File Photo: Ørsted

Denmark's Ørsted on Wednesday reported third-quarter operating profit slightly below expectations as it said low wind speeds continued to hit earnings.

"In most of Q3, we continued to see lower than normal wind speeds, which had an adverse impact on earnings from renewable assets in operation," Ørsted said in its earnings report.

It said the negative impact from lower wind speeds amounted to around 2.5 billion crowns ($389.40 million) for the first nine months of the year compared with the same period last year and 1.7 billion crowns compared with a normal wind year.

This shows that despite strong fundamentals, renewables continue to be an intermittent technology where swings in the level of winds and sunshine have a direct impact on earnings.

Ørsted reported earnings before interest, tax, depreciation, and amortization (EBITDA) at 2.98 billion Danish crowns ($463.99 million), 11% lower than last year and below the 3.07 billion crowns expected by analysts in a poll compiled by the company.

The weak wind power generation was partly offset by good performance at its combined heat and power plants boosted by higher power prices, which have hit record highs around the world as economies began to recover from the coronavirus crisis.

Ørsted still expects EBITDA this year of 15 billion-16 billion crowns, excluding divestments, and repeated it would likely hit only the lower end of its forecast core profit range in 2021. 

($1 = 6.4201 Danish crowns) 

(Reporting by Stine Jacobsen, Editing by Louise Heavens)

Current News

Exxon to Shut Two Platforms in Guyana for Two Weeks for Pipeline Connection

Exxon to Shut Two Platforms in

US Proposes Offshore Wind Auctions Off Oregon and Maine Coasts

US Proposes Offshore Wind Auct

OKEA Submits $570 Million Bestla Oil and Gas Plan

OKEA Submits $570 Million Best

Green Light for $3 Billion Oil Port off Texas Expected By Year-end

Green Light for $3 Billion Oil

Subscribe for OE Digital E‑News

Offshore Engineer Magazine