One thing that sticks out across the energy industry in all the thrust and parry over the Clean Power Plan is the paucity of financial perspective and analysis from all sides.
With the declining significance of coal-fired power come certain inescapable conclusions nonetheless:
GE has a television commercial running in the United States today titled “Ideas Are Scary,” in which it pictures an ugly, beaten-down being who sleeps in the rain and lives alone on the streets. After being rejected everywhere it goes, it at long last meets a few kindred souls who recognize the idea and welcome it inside. The idea, in the last frame, is prettied up but still quite apart in appearance from all the rest, but the crowd cheers because it is seen it now for the good thing it is.
The move from fossil-fuel-fired electricity has taken hold in the U.S., and it’s a big deal in many ways, not the least of which how it affects capital markets, where fossil-fuel stock prices, bond prices and prospects for attracting money through Master Limited Partnerships and private raisings are tight.
Tom Sanzillo is IEEFA’s director of finance.
Tomorrow: More on the Clean Power Plan and the coal industry