
Dive Brief:
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Sempra plans to sell Ecogas Mexico, a three-utility conglomerate that provides natural gas service in the Mexicali, Chihuahua and La Laguna-Durango regions in Mexico, and a minority stake in its development arm Sempra Infrastructure in order to finance expansion plans in Texas, company leaders said during a Thursday earnings call.
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The company plans to spend $13 billion on energy infrastructure this year alone, with $10 billion of that investment destined for the United States, Chairman, President and CEO Jeff Martin said.
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Analysts at Morningstar welcomed news of the sale and the company’s desire to refocus on its regulated utilities. Sempra disappointed analysts and investors in February when it cut its earnings projections amid rising costs and will “need to continue strong execution,” according to Morningstar strategist Andrew Bischof.
Dive Insight:
Sempra’s Texas subsidiaries continue to draw what analysts described as “huge numbers” from would-be customers hoping to connect to the utility’s electric system. And to bring those customers online, Sempra plans to invest heavily in new transmission projects.
The Electric Reliability Council of Texas anticipates a need for $32 billion to $35 billion in new transmission to serve a projected 150 GW peak load by 2030, and Texas-based electric distributor Oncor is “well-positioned to construct a significant portion of the required transmission infrastructure,” according to Karen Sedgwick, executive vice president and chief financial officer for Sempra. Sempra owns 80% of Oncor.
The company is already involved in the $15 billion to $17 billion Permian transmission project, which is set to become ERCOT’s first extra-high-voltage transmission project following a decision by the Public Utility Commission of Texas in April. Sempra originally anticipated that the construction of the Permian project would stretch beyond 2030, but recent regulatory decisions have shortened the timeline, prompting a need for greater near-term funding, Martin said.
And Oncor itself continues to attract a record number of requests from large prospective customers, with new requests up 30% since the end of the year, Oncor CEO Allen Nye said. The company’s customer queue now consists of 156 GW of requests from data centers, and 22 GW from other industrial sectors, he said.
Oncor has “high confidence” that 29.5 GW of that load will come online by 2031, and has signed interconnection agreements for an additional 9 GW of new load, Nye said.
“They’ve got a backlog that’s 5x of their current peak load,” Martin said. “So I think the goal really is to make sure that we are building the critical infrastructure that continues to support the economic growth in the state.”
Selling Ecogas and a minority interest in Sempra Infrastructure, which primarily owns and operates natural gas and liquefied natural gas facilities, should fund needed capital expenditures “in a much more efficient way than we originally proposed,” Nye said. It would also de-risk the company’s portfolio by ensuring 90% or more of its earnings come from regulated utilities, he said.
He anticipated the company would have more information on the sales by the end of the second quarter of this year, but Sedgwick said that initial interest in the sales has been “robust.”
Morningstar’s Bischof agreed that investors would be “best served” if more of Sempra’s earnings came from regulated utilities, but also cautioned that it will be “vital” for Oncor to recover its growing costs via a base rate case company leaders said they still plan to file during the second quarter.