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Robotics firm raises $60 million to scale up wind turbine repairs
Robotics firm raises $60 million to scale up wind turbine repairs

Yahoo

timea day ago

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Robotics firm raises $60 million to scale up wind turbine repairs

By Virginia Furness LONDON (Reuters) -Latvian tech company Aerones, which counts GE and Enel among its customers, has raised $62 million to fund a global roll out of robots and other AI-enabled solutions to protect and maintain thousands of wind turbines in over 30 countries, its CEO told Reuters. Wind power accounts for almost 10% of the world's energy generation and is growing rapidly but the majority of turbines are still maintained by hand, causing days-long blackout periods which cost energy companies and turbine operators huge sums. Aerones' robots can maintain and service vast wind-turbine blades in a minimum of half the time it takes for humans to do so, providing an efficient, safe and cost-effective solution for growth, its co-founder and CEO Dainis Kruze said. "The industry is scaling really fast and maintenance is tough," he said. "The wind turbine downtime costs more than the labour itself and that bottleneck is driving up the cost of renewable energy." "We don't wait until the blade is already on the ground but work out how to prevent that blade from falling to the ground," he said. The equity funding round was led by U.S. investors Activate Capital and S2G Investments. Aerones is also backed by a 4 million euro grant from the EU Innovation Fund and an additional 30 million euro funding round in 2023. Aerones is scaling rapidly in United States so it was important to bring on U.S. partners this time, Kruze said. The firm last year opened an office in Dallas, Texas and is hiring and training local people. The company plans to return to the market to raise around $15 million to $20 million of venture debt later this year, Kruze said. Since 2020, Aerones has enabled nearly 400,000 MWh of additional clean electricity and helped avoid 165,000 tonnes of carbon emissions, the company said in a statement. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

Robotics firm raises $60 million to scale up wind turbine repairs
Robotics firm raises $60 million to scale up wind turbine repairs

Yahoo

timea day ago

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Robotics firm raises $60 million to scale up wind turbine repairs

By Virginia Furness LONDON (Reuters) -Latvian tech company Aerones, which counts GE and Enel among its customers, has raised $62 million to fund a global roll out of robots and other AI-enabled solutions to protect and maintain thousands of wind turbines in over 30 countries, its CEO told Reuters. Wind power accounts for almost 10% of the world's energy generation and is growing rapidly but the majority of turbines are still maintained by hand, causing days-long blackout periods which cost energy companies and turbine operators huge sums. Aerones' robots can maintain and service vast wind-turbine blades in a minimum of half the time it takes for humans to do so, providing an efficient, safe and cost-effective solution for growth, its co-founder and CEO Dainis Kruze said. "The industry is scaling really fast and maintenance is tough," he said. "The wind turbine downtime costs more than the labour itself and that bottleneck is driving up the cost of renewable energy." "We don't wait until the blade is already on the ground but work out how to prevent that blade from falling to the ground," he said. The equity funding round was led by U.S. investors Activate Capital and S2G Investments. Aerones is also backed by a 4 million euro grant from the EU Innovation Fund and an additional 30 million euro funding round in 2023. Aerones is scaling rapidly in United States so it was important to bring on U.S. partners this time, Kruze said. The firm last year opened an office in Dallas, Texas and is hiring and training local people. The company plans to return to the market to raise around $15 million to $20 million of venture debt later this year, Kruze said. Since 2020, Aerones has enabled nearly 400,000 MWh of additional clean electricity and helped avoid 165,000 tonnes of carbon emissions, the company said in a statement. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

Analysis-US climate pullback threatens planned debt-for-nature deals
Analysis-US climate pullback threatens planned debt-for-nature deals

Mint

time22-05-2025

  • Business
  • Mint

Analysis-US climate pullback threatens planned debt-for-nature deals

By Marc Jones and Virginia Furness LONDON (Reuters) -Billions of dollars of debt deals aimed at protecting vital ecosystems from Africa to Latin America are at risk of unravelling or may need rework amid concerns that crucial U.S. backing is about to dry up under President Donald Trump. The 'debt-for-nature' swaps, which reduce a country's debt in return for conservation commitments, have gained traction in recent years with deals involving the Galapagos Islands, coral reefs and the Amazon rainforest among the most prominent. The U.S. International Development Finance Corporation (DFC) has been a key player, providing political risk insurance for over half of the deals done over the last five years, accounting for nearly 90% of $6 billion of swapped debt. A source with direct knowledge of the plans said the DFC had about five swaps in the pipeline which are now in question with CEO-in-waiting Ben Black and U.S. government efficiency chief Elon Musk both criticising its climate work. The source did not specify how much debt was covered by the swaps but pointed out that the last few DFC-backed deals involved over $1 billion each. Spokespeople for the White House and the DFC did not respond to requests for comment on future DFC involvement in such deals. A DFC official who spoke on condition of anonymity confirmed to Reuters it stepped down earlier this year as co-chair of a global task force set up in 2023 to expand the use of debt swaps. U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has also hit out at multilateral lenders for climate change work amid a broader U.S. retreat that has seen it withdraw from the Paris Agreement to curb global warming. Angola and Zambia and at least one Latin American country are among those whose 'debt-for-nature' swap plans risk needing to be reworked or even abandoned due to DFC uncertainty, four sources that have been directly involved in the projects said. Angolan Finance Minister Vera Daves de Sousa said her country, which is one of the most indebted in Africa and whose rivers feed the Okavango basin vital for endangered elephants and lions, has been talking to the DFC about two potential swaps. One is a debt-for-nature deal, the other a broader 'debt-for-development' swap tied to education and young people. "We feel openness from them (DFC), but especially on the debt-for-development swap," de Sousa recently told Reuters. "We respect their vision," she added. "For us there is no difference – we have opportunities on the development side, and we have opportunities on the nature side." In Zambia, which late last year was looking closely at a swap linked to its vast national parks that are home to over 40% of Africa's elephants, things have changed too. "We are not completely shutting (the swap) down but we are not actively at it right now," its Finance Minister Situmbeko Musokotwane told Reuters, declining to specify the reason for the shift. Generating money for conservation by exchanging costly government bonds for cheaper ones is seen as an obvious choice for smaller nations grappling with heavy debt loads and climate change pressures. The UK-based, non-profit International Institute for Environment and Development estimates that the world's 49 poorest countries seen most at risk of debt crises could swap a quarter of the over $430 billion they now owe. Given the signals coming from Washington, those that do should drop hopes of DFC support and look at alternatives, said White Advisory managing director Sebastian Espinosa, who has advised Barbados, Belize and Seychelles on such swaps. Those could include credit guarantees from major multilateral development banks, potentially alongside private sector insurers and guarantors, as pioneered by the Bahamas last year. Historically, though, DFC backing has been crucial in scaling up deals, offering up to $1 billion in political risk insurance. That protects those who buy the new lower-cost bonds if the governments involved fail to make payments. "Who's going to step in? (to replace DFC) I don't know," said Eva Mayerhofer at the European Investment Bank, which backed a 2023 Barbados swap. "We won't be able to do debt conversions that regularly." The Inter-American Development Bank, involved in five of the last nine debt-for-nature swaps, sometimes alongside the DFC —declined to comment on whether any of its plans were being affected. Investment firm Nuveen's Stephen Liberatore, who has been a cornerstone investor in some debt swaps, said while substitutes for the DFC could be found, the knock-on effects were yet to be seen. "What is the price for a private entity (to provide risk insurance) versus a public entity like the DFC?" Liberatore said. "Does it change the amount of savings?" which are then spent on conservation. "That's the ultimate question." (Additional reporting by Karin Strohecker in London, Chris Mfula in Zambia, Alexandra Valencia in Quito, Duncan Miriri in Nairobi, Libby George in London and Kate Abnett in Brussels; Editing by Simon Jessop and Emelia Sithole-Matarise)

Analysis-US climate pullback threatens planned debt-for-nature deals
Analysis-US climate pullback threatens planned debt-for-nature deals

The Print

time22-05-2025

  • Business
  • The Print

Analysis-US climate pullback threatens planned debt-for-nature deals

The U.S. International Development Finance Corporation (DFC) has been a key player, providing political risk insurance for over half of the deals done over the last five years, accounting for nearly 90% of $6 billion of swapped debt. The 'debt-for-nature' swaps, which reduce a country's debt in return for conservation commitments, have gained traction in recent years with deals involving the Galapagos Islands, coral reefs and the Amazon rainforest among the most prominent. By Marc Jones and Virginia Furness LONDON (Reuters) -Billions of dollars of debt deals aimed at protecting vital ecosystems from Africa to Latin America are at risk of unravelling or may need rework amid concerns that crucial U.S. backing is about to dry up under President Donald Trump. A source with direct knowledge of the plans said the DFC had about five swaps in the pipeline which are now in question with CEO-in-waiting Ben Black and U.S. government efficiency chief Elon Musk both criticising its climate work. The source did not specify how much debt was covered by the swaps but pointed out that the last few DFC-backed deals involved over $1 billion each. Spokespeople for the White House and the DFC did not respond to requests for comment on future DFC involvement in such deals. A DFC official who spoke on condition of anonymity confirmed to Reuters it stepped down earlier this year as co-chair of a global task force set up in 2023 to expand the use of debt swaps. U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has also hit out at multilateral lenders for climate change work amid a broader U.S. retreat that has seen it withdraw from the Paris Agreement to curb global warming. Angola and Zambia and at least one Latin American country are among those whose 'debt-for-nature' swap plans risk needing to be reworked or even abandoned due to DFC uncertainty, four sources that have been directly involved in the projects said. Angolan Finance Minister Vera Daves de Sousa said her country, which is one of the most indebted in Africa and whose rivers feed the Okavango basin vital for endangered elephants and lions, has been talking to the DFC about two potential swaps. One is a debt-for-nature deal, the other a broader 'debt-for-development' swap tied to education and young people. 'We feel openness from them (DFC), but especially on the debt-for-development swap,' de Sousa recently told Reuters. 'We respect their vision,' she added. 'For us there is no difference – we have opportunities on the development side, and we have opportunities on the nature side.' In Zambia, which late last year was looking closely at a swap linked to its vast national parks that are home to over 40% of Africa's elephants, things have changed too. 'We are not completely shutting (the swap) down but we are not actively at it right now,' its Finance Minister Situmbeko Musokotwane told Reuters, declining to specify the reason for the shift. NEW REALITY Generating money for conservation by exchanging costly government bonds for cheaper ones is seen as an obvious choice for smaller nations grappling with heavy debt loads and climate change pressures. The UK-based, non-profit International Institute for Environment and Development estimates that the world's 49 poorest countries seen most at risk of debt crises could swap a quarter of the over $430 billion they now owe. Given the signals coming from Washington, those that do should drop hopes of DFC support and look at alternatives, said White Advisory managing director Sebastian Espinosa, who has advised Barbados, Belize and Seychelles on such swaps. Those could include credit guarantees from major multilateral development banks, potentially alongside private sector insurers and guarantors, as pioneered by the Bahamas last year. Historically, though, DFC backing has been crucial in scaling up deals, offering up to $1 billion in political risk insurance. That protects those who buy the new lower-cost bonds if the governments involved fail to make payments. 'Who's going to step in? (to replace DFC) I don't know,' said Eva Mayerhofer at the European Investment Bank, which backed a 2023 Barbados swap. 'We won't be able to do debt conversions that regularly.' The Inter-American Development Bank, involved in five of the last nine debt-for-nature swaps, sometimes alongside the DFC —declined to comment on whether any of its plans were being affected. Investment firm Nuveen's Stephen Liberatore, who has been a cornerstone investor in some debt swaps, said while substitutes for the DFC could be found, the knock-on effects were yet to be seen. 'What is the price for a private entity (to provide risk insurance) versus a public entity like the DFC?' Liberatore said. 'Does it change the amount of savings?' which are then spent on conservation. 'That's the ultimate question.' (Additional reporting by Karin Strohecker in London, Chris Mfula in Zambia, Alexandra Valencia in Quito, Duncan Miriri in Nairobi, Libby George in London and Kate Abnett in Brussels; Editing by Simon Jessop and Emelia Sithole-Matarise) Disclaimer: This report is auto generated from the Reuters news service. ThePrint holds no responsibility for its content.

Analysis-US climate pullback threatens planned debt-for-nature deals
Analysis-US climate pullback threatens planned debt-for-nature deals

Yahoo

time22-05-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Analysis-US climate pullback threatens planned debt-for-nature deals

By Marc Jones and Virginia Furness LONDON (Reuters) -Billions of dollars of debt deals aimed at protecting vital ecosystems from Africa to Latin America are at risk of unravelling or may need rework amid concerns that crucial U.S. backing is about to dry up under President Donald Trump. The 'debt-for-nature' swaps, which reduce a country's debt in return for conservation commitments, have gained traction in recent years with deals involving the Galapagos Islands, coral reefs and the Amazon rainforest among the most prominent. The U.S. International Development Finance Corporation (DFC) has been a key player, providing political risk insurance for over half of the deals done over the last five years, accounting for nearly 90% of $6 billion of swapped debt. A source with direct knowledge of the plans said the DFC had about five swaps in the pipeline which are now in question with CEO-in-waiting Ben Black and U.S. government efficiency chief Elon Musk both criticising its climate work. The source did not specify how much debt was covered by the swaps but pointed out that the last few DFC-backed deals involved over $1 billion each. Spokespeople for the White House and the DFC did not respond to requests for comment on future DFC involvement in such deals. A DFC official who spoke on condition of anonymity confirmed to Reuters it stepped down earlier this year as co-chair of a global task force set up in 2023 to expand the use of debt swaps. U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has also hit out at multilateral lenders for climate change work amid a broader U.S. retreat that has seen it withdraw from the Paris Agreement to curb global warming. Angola and Zambia and at least one Latin American country are among those whose 'debt-for-nature' swap plans risk needing to be reworked or even abandoned due to DFC uncertainty, four sources that have been directly involved in the projects said. Angolan Finance Minister Vera Daves de Sousa said her country, which is one of the most indebted in Africa and whose rivers feed the Okavango basin vital for endangered elephants and lions, has been talking to the DFC about two potential swaps. One is a debt-for-nature deal, the other a broader 'debt-for-development' swap tied to education and young people. "We feel openness from them (DFC), but especially on the debt-for-development swap," de Sousa recently told Reuters. "We respect their vision," she added. "For us there is no difference – we have opportunities on the development side, and we have opportunities on the nature side." In Zambia, which late last year was looking closely at a swap linked to its vast national parks that are home to over 40% of Africa's elephants, things have changed too. "We are not completely shutting (the swap) down but we are not actively at it right now," its Finance Minister Situmbeko Musokotwane told Reuters, declining to specify the reason for the shift. NEW REALITY Generating money for conservation by exchanging costly government bonds for cheaper ones is seen as an obvious choice for smaller nations grappling with heavy debt loads and climate change pressures. The UK-based, non-profit International Institute for Environment and Development estimates that the world's 49 poorest countries seen most at risk of debt crises could swap a quarter of the over $430 billion they now owe. Given the signals coming from Washington, those that do should drop hopes of DFC support and look at alternatives, said White Advisory managing director Sebastian Espinosa, who has advised Barbados, Belize and Seychelles on such swaps. Those could include credit guarantees from major multilateral development banks, potentially alongside private sector insurers and guarantors, as pioneered by the Bahamas last year. Historically, though, DFC backing has been crucial in scaling up deals, offering up to $1 billion in political risk insurance. That protects those who buy the new lower-cost bonds if the governments involved fail to make payments. "Who's going to step in? (to replace DFC) I don't know," said Eva Mayerhofer at the European Investment Bank, which backed a 2023 Barbados swap. "We won't be able to do debt conversions that regularly." The Inter-American Development Bank, involved in five of the last nine debt-for-nature swaps, sometimes alongside the DFC —declined to comment on whether any of its plans were being affected. Investment firm Nuveen's Stephen Liberatore, who has been a cornerstone investor in some debt swaps, said while substitutes for the DFC could be found, the knock-on effects were yet to be seen. "What is the price for a private entity (to provide risk insurance) versus a public entity like the DFC?" Liberatore said. "Does it change the amount of savings?" which are then spent on conservation. "That's the ultimate question." (Additional reporting by Karin Strohecker in London, Chris Mfula in Zambia, Alexandra Valencia in Quito, Duncan Miriri in Nairobi, Libby George in London and Kate Abnett in Brussels; Editing by Simon Jessop and Emelia Sithole-Matarise)

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