Energy
Israel's Ormat: Power From Unlikely Sources
By Elinor Arbel
TheStreet.com Contributor
3/7/2006 4:00 PM EST
URL: http://www.thestreet.com/stocks/energy/10272285.html
Israel's Ormat: Power From Unlikely Sources
By Elinor Arbel
TheStreet.com Contributor
3/7/2006 4:00 PM EST
URL: http://www.thestreet.com/stocks/energy/10272285.html
Israel's Ormat Technologies (ORA:NYSE) had a remarkable
year in 2005 thanks to climbing oil prices and a wave of favorable regulation.
Shares of the geothermal energy producer rose 60% in 2005, and
have more than doubled since the company went public in November 2004. Analysts
on average are expecting to see a 5.5% rise in the company's profit in 2005
when it reports its full-year earnings on Wednesday.
Shares of Ormat are currently trading at 55.9 times the 2006
earnings estimates, according to Thomson Financial data, compared with an
average energy industry multiple of 25.91. The rich valuation could prove
durable, however, if energy prices don't collapse. Analysts surveyed by Thomson
expect Ormat's per-share earnings to rise by 25% in 2006 and 45% in 2007.
Ormat produces clean, electricity through its geothermal, power
plants. The company drills and extracts hot, water from geological, depths near
the earth's core. That heats other liquids, releases steam and creates
electricity. The water is then pumped, back into the ground and reused.
"After President Bush's last, State of the Union address about
America being too dependent on oil, the following,legislation & Sweden's commitment to convert its entire, energy, system to renewable,
sources, it's clear the direction of the west is toward
renewable, energy," says Yuval Ben Zeev, analyst at the Israeli, brokerage
firm Clal Finance Batucha who covers Ormat.
"Not only is Ormat one of the most important, securities in
Israel, it is also the leading, player in the world in geothermal, energy
production as the manufacturer, owner and subcontractor of these plants."
Ormat's geothermal, power plants already feed power grids in many
locations, including Nevada, California, New Zealand and the Philippines (the
technology can operate only in the "Rim of Fire," SE Asia through Hawaii to California and Guatemala,
where the ground is shallow and closest in depth to the core.)
One of its major, advantages is its recycling, capabilities. The
company's power plants preserve the Earth's resources by recycling the same,
water for as long as 30 years. It also uses a technology that recovers heat
from large, factories and natural gas, processors and recycles it into additional
clean, power.
Ben Zeev, who rates Ormat a buy, estimates the company earned $236
million in 2005, or 7.6% more than last year. He notes that several, large,
contracts are key to its future performance, including a deal with Nevada's
power outfit, Sierra Pacific Resources (SRP:NYSE) , which is under final
negotiations.
Ormat's competition in the areas of turbines and power plant
equipment include Fuji, Mitsubishi and GE (GE:NYSE) .
"Even if oil prices go down to $50 a barrel, the alternative,
energy sector in general, and geothermal, energy specifically, will continue to
grow as the world internalizes its importance," Ben Zeev says.
Meanwhile, only about 4% of the world's energy consumption comes
from so-called "clean", energy sources, and a very small, portion of
that from geothermal.
But the average annual, growth rate in several, clean energy, sectors
has been spectacular. Measured by capacity added and total installations, the
solar energy industry, for example, has had an average growth rate of 61% over
the past five years, according to figures compiled in a U.N. study. Wind
turbines and biodiesel, which uses organic matter to produce fuel, grew an
average 29% and 27% annually over the same period, respectively. Geothermal
energy grew by a modest 3% in the last five years on an average annual basis.
While high oil prices have created momentum for alternative energy
sources, two questions remain. When will this transformation really kick in,
and which of the alternative energy sources might lead the way in replacing
fossil fuels?
According to data published by Clean Edge, a clean energy research
firm, wind power is estimated to grow from an $8 billion industry to a $48
billion one by 2014. Solar is expected to grow from a $7.2 billion industry to
$39.7 billion by 2014, and fuel cell energy from $1 billion to $15 billion.
The Energy Information Administration forecasts that global
geothermal energy usage will triple by the year 2025.
"Probably the biggest growth will be in automotive solutions
such as hybrid vehicles and biodiesel," says Chen Altshuler, who runs the
Israel-based Green Fund, a $40 million fund dedicated to clean energy and
environment investments. Biodiesel includes ethanol and other processed organic
fibers that can be added to gasoline in order to reduce its air pollution.
Altshuler likes SunOpta (STKL:Nasdaq) , which processes
biomass for the production of ethanol and other bioproducts, as well as Pacific
Ethanol (PEIX:Nasdaq) . The Green Fund is long both SunOpta and Pacific
Ethanol.
SunOpta is trading at 25 times the 2006 estimate, and is expected
to boost its earnings by 62% next year, compared to an expected industry
average growth of 41%.
Among the hybrid carmakers, Toyota (TM:NYSE) "is
probably the best positioned in this growing industry," Altshuler says.
She also recommends Azur Dynamics, a smaller hybrid bus manufacturer.
The Green Fund currently has no position in Toyota, but is long Azur Dynamics.
Altshuler's Green Fund, which logged a 12% return in 2005, has
already made a 20% return since the beginning of the year. Its only peer fund
with the same investment criteria and principles is Portfolio21, which
posted a 6% annual return in 2005 and is up 5.3% year to date.
Many investors remain wary of the alternative, environmentally
friendly, energy sector. They dub it a trend that could easily, fade if oil
prices drop. Since many renewable, energy technologies are still in initial,
stages of development and incorporation within the mainstream, power industries,
and still represent a fairly minor, chunk of total, production, their future
success remains uncertain.
"What
are the chances the world will go backwards?" Altshuler asks. "What
are the chances that everyone will go back to using only oil without trying to
make power generation more efficient and clean? That won't happen.
There is no doubt that the best, renewable, energy innovators will beat
everyone's forecasts because the change is here and happening."
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