NRG Closes on SunEdison’s Solar and Wind Projects

1,500 megawatts of SunEdison projects reborn at NRG. Plus, the SunEdison disaster timeline redux.

Photo Credit: Jaybear wikimedia cc

Competitive energy supplier NRG Energy closed on its acquisition of bankrupt SunEdison's solar and wind projects, adding more than 1,500 megawatts to its 50,000-megawatt portfolio. 

It's the final act in the dismantling of the once high-flying, self-proclaimed "renewable energy supermajor."

In 2014, SunEdison jumped into deep YieldCo waters with TerraForm Power and TerraForm Global. The company made a series of large, questionable acquisitions in First Wind and Vivint, as well as a slew of lesser corporate additions. SunEdison lost almost $1 billion in the first three quarters of 2015. When SunEdison's stock was at its peak, the company raised debt rather than equity -- and that debt load returned with a vengeance.

NRG is gaining a big chunk of SunEdison's portfolio and boosting its own utility-scale portfolio. Despite NRG's difference of opinion with its fired CEO, renewables champion David Crane, the company is not abandoning renewables. It continues to replenish projects for YieldCo partner NRG Yield.

According to a blog post, the acquired portfolio includes:

The contract with SunEdison provides for up to $183 million in payment, comprising an upfront payment of $124 million and subsequent payment of $15 million after the power-purchase agreements in Hawaii are closed. NRG may pay another $44 million if certain project benchmarks are met.

Outside of SunEdison’s federal bankruptcy court process, NRG also acquired a 29-megawatt portfolio of in-construction and construction-ready distributed solar projects.

Here's an updated SunEdison timeline.

SunEdison's tale of woe timeline

June 2014: The launch of SunEdison's first YieldCo, TerraForm Power.

Nov. 2014: SunEdison and TerraForm acquire wind developer First Wind for $2.4 billion.

July 2015: TerraForm Global, a YieldCo focused on investment in Africa and Asia, launches.

July 2015: SunEdison's $2.2 billion plan to acquire residential installer Vivint in cash, stock and notes does not delight investors. The stock price collapses upon the announcement.

Sept. 2015: CEO Ahmad Chatila sends a memo notifying employees of a 15 percent workforce cut. GTM's Stephen Lacey reports: "Sources within the company expressed worry and surprise that the cuts didn't impact the architects of the Vivint acquisition."

Dec. 2015: SunEdison revised the terms of its acquisition of Vivint.

Jan. 2016:

Feb. 2016:

March 2016:

April 2016

June 2016

August 2016

Nov. 2016

Base chart: Google Finance