Enel eyes expansion to US, other power distribution markets

  • "In the US we are in generation... we would like to enter one day into distribution," Enel Global Infrastructure and Networks CEO Antonio Cammisecra told a media briefing.
  • Enel manages power distribution grids in 8 countries in Latin America and Europe and more than 40% of its 17.9 billion euros of core earnings came from networks last year.
20 Apr, 2021

MILAN: Enel wants to expand its power distribution business outside Europe and Latin America and would like to enter the US market, the networks boss at Italy's biggest utility said on Tuesday.

"In the US we are in generation... we would like to enter one day into distribution," Enel Global Infrastructure and Networks CEO Antonio Cammisecra told a media briefing.

Enel manages power distribution grids in 8 countries in Latin America and Europe and more than 40% of its 17.9 billion euros of core earnings came from networks last year.

"To identify potential targets, Europe and Latin America are on the radar screen but yes... we are also looking at other geographical areas," Cammisecra said.

Enel, which is one of the world's biggest renewable energy companies, is planning to spend 16.2 billion euros ($19.52 billion) on distribution networks in the next two years and 60 billion euros to 2030.

Around 65% of that will go on reinforcing its grids and improving digital resilience to cope with increasing volumes of power generated from renewable energy sources.

"For every dollar spent on renewables, you need to spend another dollar on grids," Cammisecra said.

Asked about new business lines, Cammisecra said the group had set up a company that would offer digital and infrastructure devices and services to other companies for managing grids.

The unit will be operational by the end of the year.

He also said Enel was ready to offer its management skills to run grids in distribution companies where it was not the majority shareholder or even a shareholder at all.

"Simply put... doing everything we do in managing infrastructure but with other people's money."

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