Long opinion on the energy problem in ca capstone and competitors are talked about Perry Industry Note United States Power Technology California Crisis Helps Drive Electrical Eq./Power Tech Opportunities California Crisis Helps Drive Electrical Eq./Power Tech Opportunities California Crisis Helps Drive Electrical Eq./Power Tech Opportunities California Crisis Helps Drive Electrical Eq./Power Tech Opportunities January 24, 2001 Jeffrey Sprague David Smith SUMMARY ➤ The escalating power crises in California highlights the significant under investment which has been made in power assets over the past several years. ➤ We believe the crisis opens up the opportunity for passage of interconnection standards which would help accelerate the adoption of DG technologies. ➤ The crisis is leading companies to the conclusion that they have to take proactive steps to protect their business, which should also drive more traditional power and power quality investments in the form of back-up generators and UPS systems. ➤ On the large cap side, GE and Emerson are our favorite plays. Among the emerging company’s all should benefit from news flow out of California but we see Capstone (CPST) as having the most immediate opportunity to benefit. Hydrogenics (HYGS) should benefit from accelerating fuel cell test and development expenditures. OPINION The BANANA Republic Creates Electrical Equipment/Power Technology Investment Opportunities In recent years the concept of NIMBY (not in my back yard) in California has been replaced by BANANA (build absolutely nothing anywhere near anyone), which has contributed to severe power system supply shortages. These shortages have been severely aggravated by an ill-conceived “deregulation” plan which ignores the supply and demand tenets of Economics 101. The irony is that California is beginning to look like the stereotypical Banana Republic with the population starved for electricity. Now California is in a bind which will probably take many years to fully recover from, but creates numerous investment opportunities among our traditional Electrical Equipment group and among the emerging Power Technology companies. Clearly investment in traditional power generating equipment and infrastructure will have to increase in California and the rest of the nation. However, with General Electric’s (GE; 1L, $48.69) backlog full through 2003 and orders being taken as far out as 2005, gas turbines are in tight supply. We expect GE’s business to remain strong as it works to squeeze more units out of its factories, but GE is not adding capacity. GE’s power service business which is aimed at uprating (getting more our of old turbines) should also accelerate. GE’s broad product offering in mini-turbines, rated at 1 megawatt and up, should also continue seeing strong demand. These machines are attractive as back-up or baseload generators and should be faster to deploy than large central generating stations. These machines would benefit significantly if widespread interconnection standards (discussed below) are established. We expect Emerson’s (EMR; 1M, $73.75) power quality business to remain very strong as business leaders react to the potential damage to their franchises if they sustain continued power outages. Simply put, it is clear to users of electricity that they cannot depend on the incumbent supplier infrastructure to protect their mission critical applications. We believe orders at Emerson’s flagship Liebert division (Uninterruptible Power Systems (UPS)) were up well over 30% in Q4 and expect this business to remain strong throughout 2001. Interconnection Standards Should Facilitate DG Adoption Following several Stage 3 emergency energy alerts (and three subsequently imposed rolling black-outs) in California within the past two weeks, combined with the likelihood for many more as the power grid remains stretched, we believe that grid interconnectivity standards for Distributed Generation (DG) technologies in California and other states may be just around the corner. The State of California’s Energy Security and Reliability Act of 2000 already passed rules forbidding incumbents from inhibiting free adoption of DG technologies. As state politicians seek ways to reduce pressure on the electricity infrastructure, distributed generation technologies could not only benefit from California’s current misfortunes, but also other states that have increasing power loads and may be near critical reserve margins. In particular, several West Coast states other than California have indicated in past weeks that they are unable to sell excess power supply to California due to reduced hydro generating capacity and their own rising state demand and similar reliability concerns. We believe smart, or frightened, regulators and politicians in other states are likely to take steps to keep the debacle in California from happening in their states. Note that these power shortages come at a time when several manufacturing industries companies have scaled back operations (and are therefore using less power than in 2000) in a slowing U.S. economy. Shortages are also happening in the winter when electricity demand is typically lower (less air conditioning demand). Should the economy experience a soft landing and post a recovery later in the year (and experience higher electricity demand from sectors that have already slowed) when warm weather stretches grid capacity, California’s current power grid woes may only be the tip of the iceberg. Moreover, while California’s grid reserve margins dipped below 1.5% several times this past month, we get the sense that other surrounding states could be nearing this level. While accurate reserve margins by state are not published on a timely basis, reduced hydroelectric capacity caused by low rainfall levels in the past year have caused surrounding West Coast states to think twice before selling excess reserves this past month. Given the increased awareness that has arisen as a result of deregulation, the best near term solution appears to be to allow DG technologies to connect to the grid to relieve system stress. While Capstone Turbine (CPST #; 1H, $37.19) has received interconnectivity approval for its microturbines in New York state and Texas, the largest near term opportunity could be to relieve the stretched Californian power grid. In this context, Capstone’s new 60 kW microturbine can operate either stand-alone or in tandem with the existing infrastructure. Accordingly, given that up to 10 units can be stacked together to provide 600 kW of power, we think that the company is extremely well positioned to provide clean and reliable electricity to commercial and light industrial customers that wish to generate their own electric power. A survey we came across recently indicated that if given the chance, 52% of the commercial and industrial businesses in California would switch to self-generation while remaining attached to the power grid. This would not only relieve customer reliability concerns, but also allow the states to purchase power from these independent producers (through a process termed ‘grid metering’) when excess capacity is available, in effect having a double impact in taking a significant load away from the current electrical infrastructure, and widening existing reserve margins. Interestingly, most of the problem that has arisen in California has been driven by ‘partial’ deregulation that has missed the mark. Specifically, while the state deregulated its power infrastructure in 1996, three points in particular have led to most of the problem today. First, the state decided to compensate power generation companies for stranded assets built before deregulation, yet required new incoming competitors to bear part of the cost to recover generous payments made by the state for those assets. The end result is that the cost to build new facilities makes it very difficult for new entrants to compete on price given a hefty fixed 3 cost structure, and no new power generating facilities have been built in more than 10 years. Secondly, the California legislature required that utilities enter into only short-term energy supply contracts, thereby making them unable to hedge against rising prices through derivatives. As a result, these companies are much more exposed to wholesale energy price volatility. Lastly, state legislators required that consumer prices remain capped, while wholesale pricing could be determined by market pricing. Again, this left the utilities highly exposed if prices rise, while giving very little incentive to consumers to pull back on energy usage even if wholesale prices rose significantly. While we view the issues occurring in California today as primarily two separate events caused by capacity shortages and rising natural gas prices, they are indirectly linked in that the utilities must sell power at prices well below cost. Due to this scenario, the utilities have come under a cash crunch. Separately, a capacity shortage caused by required system maintenance and a secular rise in demand (state consumption has increased disproportionately due to feeding the digital economy, compared to the U.S. 3% average demand growth seen in the past three years) has forced California to rely on borrowing power generation capacity from its neighboring states in the past year. Given liquidity issues that have evolved from selling below cost, these neighbors now are unwilling to sell to the state, that has come to rely heavily on its neighbors. Accordingly, we firmly believe that distributed generation offers a possible near-term solution to California’s power problems. Given the sorry state of California’s electric power system, we think that it and other states could view the current debacle as an opportunity to change existing laws to encourage new forms of power generation. While this could be proactive on a macro basis, the ‘not in my backyard’ mentality that has been so prevalent in the past decade (due to California’s heightened environmental awareness) would curtail the likelihood of major new generating assets (i.e. large hydroelectric projects or even nuclear plants). The more likely scenario would be to build more smaller gas-fired turbines. However, backlogs delivery times remain lengthy, and the solution still does not circumvent the ‘not in my backyard’ issue. As such, we think that the ideal solution would be to allow (and even provide incentives for) alternative energy solutions such as microturbines, wind, solar power and eventually fuel cells. This solution would enable the states to increase capacity and ensure consumers reliability at reasonable rates. While we believe that consumers, politicians and utilities realize the benefits of a deregulated electricity market, the fastest solution likely will be establishing interconnection standards for distributed generation given that additional centralized power generating facilities continue to face resistance and supply shortages. In this context, we think that alternative technologies are set to benefit in deregulated power markets, which includes diesel and reciprocating generators in the near term, and further out fuel cells and wind power. We should note, however, that microturbines are particularly well positioned given that many states have imposed limitations on running diesel-fired power generation due to emissions concerns. Microturbines typically emit well below 50 ppm of NOx, while diesel gensets generate more like 500 ppm of NOx, significantly higher CO2 and particulate matter (soot), that has been proven to be carcinogenic. We expect that a practical solutions to power shortages will have to move forward sooner rather than later, given that capacity utilization issues likely will be exacerbated by the summer and could be even further magnified by a soft landing in the economy. Moreover, already tight supplies in neighboring coastal states could lead to geographically extended rolling black-outs and unexpected brown-outs that are both intolerable from an operating and an economic standpoint in the digital economy. Accordingly, we think that the microturbine companies with commercial product today including Capstone Turbine and Honeywell (HON; 1L, $47.88) are well positioned to benefit from declining state reserve margins and needs for alternate sources of energy to 4 lessen the strain on the power grid. Additionally, GE, which has a full line of what we call mini-turbines (1mW and up) should also see strong demand from businesses looking to improve back-up abilities and/or self generate. Those companies that have commercial product today should benefit in robust incoming orders. While we think that other emerging technologies could benefit in the long term, remember that commercialization of several of these DG solutions are at a minimum 18-24 months out, and would be more cautious on some of these names at the present time. However, a primary near-term beneficiary could be Hydrogenics (HYGS #; 1S, $6.69) as many fuel cell companies rush to complete testing and product development and populate production lines with commercial production equipment in order to get operational units out into the field. |