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S&P downgrades Orsted credit rating
S&P downgrades Orsted credit rating

Irish Examiner

time2 days ago

  • Business
  • Irish Examiner

S&P downgrades Orsted credit rating

Orsted was downgraded to the lowest tier of investment grade by S&P Global Ratings on increasing risks to its US offshore wind business as the Trump Administration moves to halt the sector's development. It's just the latest bit of bad news for the company after the announcement of a rights issues on Monday sent shares plunging the most ever this week. In Ireland, Orsted has almost 30 wind farms in operation or development, along with two solar farms. In 2023 it entered a 50/50 partnership with the ESB to develop offshore wind farms. However, over the past few years, the Danish utility has been forced to write off billions of dollars amid cancellations and delays to projects on both sides of the Atlantic because of soaring costs and volatile policies. Orsted's long-term issuer credit rating was dropped one notch to BBB-, just one step above junk, S&P said in a statement on Thursday. It cited business challenges including the Danish company's inability to carry out project refinancing and divest 50% of its US-based Sunrise wind project. The downgrade 'can only be characterised as a clearly negative surprise,' Danske Bank Chief Credit Analyst Jakob Magnussen wrote in a note. 'We had expected that S&P would stay at 'BBB' and possibly even assign a positive outlook.' 'These expected updates do not impact our business plan,' said Trond Westlie, Orsted's chief financial officer. 'We're comfortable with our credit metrics and believe they are in a good place commensurate with solid investment grade rating.' All the firm's current offshore wind projects, totaling 8.1 gigawatts, are progressing according to plan, Westlie said in an emailed comment. S&P also noted that it had revised its view of the firm's management and governance as 'moderately negative' because of the credit impact of its 'high-risk strategy that, to some extent, current management inherited.' Orsted said earlier this week that it planned to raise as much as 60 billion Danish kroner ($9.4bn (€8.1bn)) in a stock sale to steady its finances after US President Donald Trump's policies to limit offshore wind stifled the company's ability to sell project stakes. Since coming into office, Trump has halted permitting for new offshore wind developments, withdrawn millions of acres of ocean for development, and hastened the end of renewable energy tax incentives.

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