The company that just produced the largest quarterly profit in business history is now investing in the largest solar energy deal ever made by a company other than an electric utility.
Does that mean anything and if so, what?
The consensus appears to be that it is meaningful. Everything Apple does is examined under a microscope with a very fine lens. And the company is savvy enough to understand that its decisions are seen as indicators of some larger truth or future trend.
Given the size of its profits, cost-saving is not the real issue here, though it could certainly be a consideration in the future. But Apple is a company that gives a lot of thought to its customers, what they want and how to deliver it. It is an enterprise known for effective, forward-thinking decision making.
So if Apple is saying that it considers spending almost a billion dollars on solar power a smart idea, its reasoning must be respected. This is, after all, a company that has employed tax dodges, exploited loopholes and aggressively sought shelter for its income - all in the face of considerable public and regulatory approbation. It is not an innocent, nor is it a goody-goody. It fights fiercely for profitability and growth.
This is an issue about which Apple's customers care so it is a matter about which Apple has decided - among many others - that it must care. And given its analysis of its options, this is apparently a good one. As the following article explains, it is in strong corporate company on this. Based on its performance to date, the only intelligent reaction should probably be, how can I get a piece of this action? JL
Tom Randall reports in Bloomberg:
All of Apple's data centers are now powered by renewables. The Apple deal is the first of its size for solar, a milestone on the road to cheap, unsubsidized power from the sun.
It was a year ago this week that Apple Chief Executive Officer Tim Cook responded to a climate-change heckler at the company's annual shareholder meeting with an impassioned rebuttal in which he famously told investors who care only about profits to "get out of the stock."
Now Cook is putting his prodigious sums of money where his mouth is, proclaiming the “biggest, boldest and most ambitious project ever,” an $850 million agreement to buy solar power from First Solar, the biggest U.S. developer of solar farms. The deal will supply enough electricity to power all of Apple’s California stores, offices, headquarters and a data center, Cook said Tuesday at the Goldman Sachs technology conference in San Francisco.
It’s the biggest-ever solar procurement deal for a company that isn't a utility, and it nearly triples Apple’s stake in solar, according to an analysis by Bloomberg New Energy Finance (BNEF). “The investment amount is enormous,” said Michel Di Capua, head of North American research at BNEF. “This is a really big deal.”
The blueprint
The agreement positions the CEO of the world’s biggest company at the center of the global debate about climate change and the future of energy—a role Cook has increasingly embraced over the past two years. The company has been ramping up its investment in solar, with two 20 Mw plants completed and a third under development in North Carolina, and a 20 Mw plant in development in Reno, Nev. All of Apple's data centers are now powered by renewables.
- Cost: $850 million
- Power: Apple will get 130 megawatts, enough to power 60,000 California homes
- Location: First Solar’s California Flats Solar Project in Monterey County
- Contract duration: 25 years
- Footprint: 2,900 acres (12 square kilometers)
- Start date: Middle of this year
- Completion: End of 2016 (in time to take advantage of a 30 percent U.S. tax credit)
- Profitable? Yes, for both, although Apple and First Solar didn’t disclose the deal's full terms
“We know that climate change is real,” Cook said on Tuesday. “Our view is that the time for talk has passed, and the time for action is now. We’ve shown that with what we’ve done.”
Wind power has long been cheaper than solar, and such tech companies as Google, Microsoft, and Amazon have taken advantage by investing heavily in wind.
But the sun is the future. The price of solar has been declining quicker than that of wind, and by 2050 solar could be the world's biggest single source of electricity, according to the International Energy Agency. The Apple deal is the first of its size for solar, a milestone on the road to cheap, unsubsidized power from the sun.
Electricity Prices for Similar Deals ($/Mwh)
Apple isn't investing in solar as a gift to humanity. It's doing it because it's a good business deal, Cook stressed at the Goldman Sachs conference. "We expect to have very significant savings," he said.As if to underline that fact, within minutes of announcing the solar deal, Apple's stock ended the trading day with a record valuation of $711 billion, making it the first U.S. company to cross the $700 billion mark. Shares of both Apple and First Solar surged.
Follow the Leaders
- Google: Last year Google signed a 400 Mw power-purchase deal in wind, bringing its total to 1 gigawatt.
- Microsoft: In the past two years, Microsoft has entered into deals for 285 Mw of wind, including one of the world's biggest contracts for a single facility.
- Amazon: Just last month, Amazon jumped into the race, signing a 150 Mw wind agreement.
- Ikea: In September, Ikea and a group of large companies committed to becoming 100 percent renewable by 2020. The furniture retailer already gets a significant amount of its power through company-owned wind projects worldwide.
- Wal-Mart: The big-box retailer has been busy putting panels on the tops of its big boxes, with more than 100 Mw of capacity installed.
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