The biggest name in coal is getting into renewable energy.
St. Louis-based Peabody Energy — the world’s largest private-sector coal company — announced Tuesday that it has launched a “renewable energy development company” called R3 Renewables.
The new firm is the product of a joint venture between Peabody, Riverstone Credit Partners and Summit Partners Credit Advisors.
The renewable industry newcomer has plans to make big moves fairly quickly, by pursuing the development of more than 3.3 gigawatts of solar power and 1.6 gigawatts of battery storage capacity over the next five years, Peabody said in a release.
One gigawatt is enough power to illuminate 110 million LED bulbs.
Peabody touted the move as one that brings together a variety of “collective strengths,” from capital markets to “extensive” land holdings. The coal giant appears ready to offer the latter, because R3 Renewables will initially “be engaged in the development of six potential sites on large tracts of land on or near previous coal mining operations in Indiana and Illinois.”
People are also reading…
- Letter: Trump praising Putin and insulting Biden is a traitorous act
- Former Blues player running for Missouri congressional seat
- Updraft? MLB, union close gap on reinventing draft, crave 11th-hour momentum in negotiations
- 6 St. Louis chefs, 1 restaurant are 2022 James Beard Awards semifinalists
- Cross-country trucker protest against vaccine mandates rolls through Missouri
- Negotiations go sideways, leaving MLB, union little time to start regular season as scheduled
- Truck convoy protesting vaccine mandates pulls plug before reaching Missouri
- ‘Something out of a movie’: Rockwood assistant principal charged with stealing family’s dog
- Missouri Senate overcomes dress code dilemma, approves $4.5 billion spending plan
- Scott Spiezio, now sober, sharing life lessons in retirement on farm near Chicago
- Lindenwood is stepping up to Division I, will join Ohio Valley Conference
- Messenger: Fellow Republican offers Missouri governor a lesson in class, civics
- ‘Shining star’: KMOV anchor Samantha Jones balances work, being a new mom
- Perjury trial for Greitens investigator to offer a glimpse into ethics case against St. Louis prosecutor
- Editorial: When the world faces this kind of crisis, national unity is paramount
Peabody also hinted that the targeted sites offered strategically convenient access to transmission lines on the electric grid.
The combination of available land and attractive locations gives the projects the potential to be “the largest solar and battery storage projects in both Indiana and Illinois,” Peabody said.
The new pursuit stands to create “additional value from our existing assets” while supporting environmental and social goals of the company and its customers, Peabody CEO Jim Grech said in a statement.
Meanwhile, the work will receive financial boosts from other partners in the joint venture.
“As one of the world’s largest private investment firms focused on energy, power, decarbonization and infrastructure, we believe we are well positioned to assist R3 Renewables to reclaim, reimagine and repower the region by pursuing these ambitious and transformative renewable energy projects,” Daniel Flannery, a managing director at Riverstone, added in the release.
The new company will be led by CEO John Jones, who has held leadership roles tied to renewable energy with companies such as General Electric and Invenergy, a Chicago-based project developer and operator.
Peabody’s foray into renewable energy is not the only significant, or perhaps radical, recent shift in the coal industry. Arch Coal, the Creve Coeur-based company, changed its name to Arch Resources in 2020 as it embarked on a strategic “pivot” away from coal used for power generation — turning instead to an emphasis on coal used in steelmaking.
Environmental advocates said Peabody’s move was yet another signal that renewable energy has powerful economic appeal, driven by lots of demand, shrinking prices, and lower risk for a good return. And pairing renewable projects with energy storage can be even more appealing, to help smooth out power interruptions.
“The bottom line is they’re capitalists,” said Ashok Gupta, a Kansas City-based energy economist for the Natural Resources Defense Council. “This is a good place to make money right now.”
Get the latest local business news delivered FREE to your inbox weekly.