MELBOURNE, Dec 29 (Reuters Breakingviews) – Climate-change dealmaking is about to get a lot more legit. Green-tinged transactions more than tripled in value in 2021 to $164 billion by early December, per Refinitiv, though there’s no standard definition for what merits the colour. There has, though, been a dearth in genuinely environmentally useful tie-ups. Expect more to emerge.
Some transactions claiming a climate rationale are just ecological virtue signalling. Santos (STO.AX) boss Kevin Gallagher argues his firm’s recent $6 billion embrace read more of Oil Search (OSH.AX) will help to “successfully navigate the transition to a lower carbon future”, yet he’ll increase fossil-gas drilling more than 45% to get there.
Special-purpose acquisition companies, meanwhile, dominate the eco-friendly deals list, topped by multi-billion-dollar swoops for electric-vehicle makers Polestar and Lucid (LCID.O). These, though, are more capital-raising public listings – albeit by by the SPAC door – than mergers.
Climate-risk avoidance has been the biggest driver for the past two years, like the $50 billion creation of carmaker Stellantis (STLA.MI). Ditto BHP’s (BHP.AX) $16 billion read more oil-and-gas sale to Woodside Petroleum (WPL.AX) and offloading of coal assets read more , or Anglo American’s (AAL.L) Thungela Resources (TGAJ.J) read more coal miner spinoff. These mitigate corporate exposures. They don’t tackle overall greenhouse-gas emissions.
That’ll be the next big M&A thing. It may involve, for instance, upstart electric-vehicle makers like Lucid, Polestar or Rivian Automotive (RIVN.O) combining. Equally, smaller players such as Nikola (NKLA.O), valued at $4 billion in mid-December, could make tasty morsels for lagging behemoths like Toyota Motor (7203.T) or Nissan Motor .
Large environmental companies like $66 billion Ecolab (ECL.N) and $22 billion Xylem (XYL.N) have a history of making bolt-on acquisitions. They’re potential prey as well as predator for conglomerates like Danaher (DHR.N) and Honeywell. Software could be in the mix too: $61 billion Autodesk (ADSK.O) in February bought H2O data-infrastructure specialist Innovyze for $1 billion. Such capabilities could interest green-preening tech giants like Microsoft (MSFT.O) or Alphabet (GOOGL.O).
More Stories
Thinning Antarctic ice shelf finally crumbles after heatwave
March 26 (Reuters) - An East Antarctica ice shelf disintegrated this month following a period of extreme heat in the...
1 Year’s Rain In A Week: Floods Batter Australia As Towns Brace For More
Sydney: Australian authorities on Friday warned of more rains over the weekend in several flooded regions in the country’s east, likely...
Global Warming And Land Use Change To Drive More Extreme Wildfires
Extreme wildfires are set to become more frequent, increasing by around 50% by the end of this century, according to...
Climate Change: Key Crops Face Major Shifts As World Warms
The parts of the world suitable for growing coffee, cashews and avocados will change dramatically as the world heats up,...
Tsunami Warning In Tonga After Giant Eruption
Tsunami warnings have been issued in several countries including Tonga, Fiji, and New Zealand, after a giant underwater volcano eruption....
Australia Equals Hottest Day On Record At 50.7C
Australia has equalled its hottest day on record after a remote coastal town reported temperatures of 50.7C (123.26F). The temperature...