Glennmont,
which raises long-term capital to invest in wind farms, biomass, solar parks
and hydro plants (Danny Lawson/PA)
|
The founders of a major
clean energy fund have shrugged off Donald Trump’s shift away from renewable
power, claiming the global industry is too advanced to be halted by the US
president.
Press
Association report continues:
Peter
Dickson, technical director of Glennmont Partners, said the renewable energy
sector was now driving itself after cutting loose from state-backed subsidies
and attracting an influx of private investment.
Mr
Trump has moved to break up Barack Obama’s environmental legacy by pulling
America out of the 2015 Paris climate accord and backing carbon-intensive power
sources such as fossil fuels.
Despite
the US president’s crusade, Mr Dickson said institutional investors were wary
of the risks surrounding coal and gas power stations and were more attracted to
the falling cost of green energy.
Speaking
to the Press Association, Mr Dickson said investors are concerned that fossil
fuel power projects could become “stranded assets” if the global push for
decarbonization sparks regulatory change.
He
said: “Despite things we hear from President Trump, the policy around
renewables has almost gone beyond that point now.
“We
are at that point where things are starting to become self-propelled and the
incentives themselves are no longer coming from Government, but from the
economies of scale and the value of the assets themselves.”
Glennmont,
which raises long-term capital to invest in wind farms, biomass, solar parks
and hydro plants, has €937 million (£831 million) under management. The group
is currently eyeing European investments following the launch of a third clean
energy fund in January.
Chief
executive Joost Bergsma said the profile of its investors had changed since it
broke off from BNP Paribas 10 years ago, with medium-sized pension funds
joining large institutional investors, sovereign wealth funds and insurance
companies.
The
group is also seeing a growing interest from Asian investors, who are keen to
broaden their horizons from riskier, high-return, investments towards the type
of steady income generated from green infrastructure.
On
Brexit, Mr Dickson said a number of firms had domiciled their funds in
Luxembourg to shield them from the uncertainty surrounding Britain’s EU
divorce.
He
said Glennmont was largely “immune” to Brexit disruption because the Climate
Change Act 2008 means the UK’s decarbonization target will remain in place once
the UK quits the bloc.
He
added: “If it wasn’t for that, we would probably be in a more volatile place
this year, but that establishes our 2050 target for decarbonization and we have
no choice but to continue along that path.
“We cannot doubt that the trajectory we are on remains solid, and with that the UK remains a good market.”
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