Clearway Energy (CWEN) Q1 2024 Earnings Call Transcript

CWEN earnings call for the period ending March 31, 2024.

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Clearway Energy (CWEN 6.22%)
Q1 2024 Earnings Call
May 09, 2024, 8:00 a.m. ET

Contents:

  • Prepared Remarks
  • Questions and Answers
  • Call Participants

Prepared Remarks:

Operator

Good day, and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Clearway Energy, Inc. first quarter 2024 earnings call. [Operator instructions] Please be advised that today’s conference is being recorded.

I would now like to hand the conference over to your speaker today, Chris Sotos, outgoing president and CEO of Clearway Energy, Inc.

Chris SotosDirector, Investor Relations

Good morning. Let me first thank you for taking the time to join Clearway Energy, Inc.’s first quarter call. Joining me this morning are Akil Marsh, director of investor relations; Sarah Rubenstein, CFO; and Craig Cornelius, president and CEO of Clearway Energy Group, our sponsor, and incoming president and CEO of Clearway Energy, Inc. Before we begin, I’d like to quickly note that today’s discussion will contain forward-looking statements which are based on assumptions that we believe to be reasonable as of this date.

Actual results may differ materially. Please review the safe harbor in today’s presentation, as well as the risk factors in our SEC filings. In addition, we will refer to both GAAP and non-GAAP financial measures. For information regarding our non-GAAP financial measures and reconciliations to the most directly comparable GAAP measures, please refer to today’s presentation.

Turn to Page 4. CWEN’s first quarter delivered solid results, primarily due to strong renewable resource at Alta, generating $52 million of CAFD, establishing a strong start for the year, allowing for a reaffirmation of our 2024 guidance of $395 million. Clearway also increased its dividend by 1.7% for the quarter, bringing our quarterly dividend to $0.4102 a share or $1.6408 on an annualized basis, in line with our targeted dividend growth of 7% for 2024. Our latest investments continue to achieve commercial operations with Cedar Creek and Texas Solar Nova 2 now contributing to CWEN’s CAFD.

CWEN also committed to approximately $65 million of new corporate capital deployments since our last earnings call, generating five-year annual average CAFD yields of approximately 10% with the executed agreements on Dan’s Mountain and Rosamond South 1. As a result of our continued execution around deployment of the thermal proceeds, CWEN is increasing our pro forma CAFD outlook to $420 million from $415 million. In the medium term through 2026, the remaining drop-down offers to fully allocate the thermal proceeds are on track to become commitments in 2024, allowing CWEN to achieve $2.15 of CAFD per share by 2026 with no external capital and reaffirm the ability to achieve the upper range of 5% to 8% EPS growth through 2026. Finally, as Craig will go into more detail on a couple of slides, CWEN’s visibility to grow beyond 2026 continues to improve in several facets.

First, we have completed a joint development agreement with Clearway Group that optimizes our Utah Solar assets with the potential to invest up to $85 million in 2026 at a 10% cap yield. In addition, CWEN has executed RA contracts for Marsh Landing and Walnut Creek with strong pricing, enhancing visibility into organic CAFD per share growth in 2027 and beyond. Importantly, these contracts were signed outside of the large procurement processes conducted by the utilities and demonstrate the critical role Clearway’s gas assets play in the California grid. Finally, our sponsor’s 30-gigawatt renewable pipeline continues to develop with 8 — approximately 8 gigawatts of late-stage projects targeting CODs over the next five years.

In summary, Clearway has started the year in a strong position with solid CAFD performance, continued execution around our 2026 CAFD goals, and continued progress and growth for 2027 and beyond. Page 5 provides a summary of Clearway’s $65 million of committed growth investments signed between our February call and now with anticipated commercial operations in the first half of 2025. These investments are expected to generate five-year annual average CAFD yield of approximately 10%, underpinned by long-term contracts of 12 to 15 years, adding strong accretion to CWEN’s asset mix and strong returns on a risk-adjusted basis. On the left side of the page is Dan’s Mountain Wind asset at 55 megawatts and Clearway’s first in Maryland, providing additional exposure to the PJM market with a strong long-term outlook for energy and REC pricing in the future.

On the right side of the page, you see the corporate capital anticipated CAFD for Rosamond South 1, a 257-megawatt solar, plus storage, project in California with no settled revenue contracts with a diversified offtake profile. Both of these investments continue to expand the fleet with strong CAFD accretion and significant contracted tenors, adding to long-term CAFD growth prospects of CWEN. I’d be remiss if my last call as CWEN’s CEO, I did not review our graph showing growth through 2026. Our sponsor, through Craig’s leadership and the work of so many colleagues at Clearway Energy Group, had developed and dropped to CWEN over 1,800 net megawatts and 15 different drop-down assets in order to redeploy the thermal proceeds efficiently and accretively.

The Clearway enterprise has always been about execution, execution in developing quality assets; execution in raising capital to fund them, both during construction and long term; and execution of being stewards of those assets and the cash they generate over their useful lives. Slide 6 demonstrates our path to $2.15 per share with the remaining approximately $150 million of excess thermal proceeds to be deployed in approximate 10% five-year annual average CAFD yield. These remaining assets should achieve their commercial operation dates during 2025, putting CWEN in a good position for 2026 and beyond for CAFD generation and dividend growth. So while moving on from Clearway to find new opportunities, I feel confident that Craig, who has led so much of the execution that has put CWEN on its current growth trajectory through this volatile period, will continue the enterprise’s legacy of execution, regardless of market challenges.

Craig, turning over to you.

Craig CorneliusPresident and Chief Executive Officer, Clearway Energy Group

Thanks, Chris. I want to start just by saying how grateful all of us at Clearway are for the truly remarkable work that you’ve done over more than a decade to build up the business that we have become. If the results we achieved during the last quarter attest, you’re leaving Clearway Energy, Inc. in a strong position with forward momentum.

We look forward to honoring your legacy with execution and value creation in the quarters and years ahead. As Chris mentioned, CWEN is well-positioned to be able to fully allocate the remaining thermal proceeds in 2024 via committed investments on drop-down offers that will enable CWEN to meet its previously stated goal for run-rate CAFD per share in 2026. Together, the partnership interests offered already and the pending offer will provide the opportunity to invest approximately $150 million of corporate capital into projects with very solid long-term contractual structures at an accretive CAFD yield of 10%. Once these offers go through CWEN’s customary rigorous underwriting and approval process, led by CWEN’s independent directors on the Governance, Conflicts, and Nominating committee, these future potential commitments can complete CWEN’s growth investment path to achieving $2.15 of CAFD per share by 2026.

To go into more details on the existing and pending offers, the first projects I’ll highlight are the Luna Valley and Daggett Storage 1 projects. Highly compatible with CWEN’s investment mandate, the projects’ generation and capacity is underpinned by diversified node-settled contracts with investment-grade load-serving entities with terms of over 15 years. Subject to approval by its GCN committee, CWEN could commit to investments in the projects during the second quarter of 2024 with funding of investments in the projects to occur in the first half of 2025. The final project planned for allocation of the thermal proceeds is the Pine Forest solar plus storage complex.

The project’s 300 megawatts of solar generation will be fully contracted with a diverse set of investment-grade counterparties with 17 years average contract life. Meanwhile, its 200 megawatts of battery capacity will complement the solar generation at Pine Forest and balance our overall renewable generation fleet in Texas. An offer is planned for early this summer. And subject to approval by CWEN’s GCN, we would aim for concluding an investment commitment in 2024 and funding the investment in Q4 2025.

In conclusion, we are pleased to have a clear line of sight ahead toward meeting our previously stated goal of reaching $2.15 in run-rate CAFD per share by 2026. Turning to Slide 8. I want to begin looking ahead beyond $2.15 in CAFD per share to our levers for further growth in CAFD and dividends per share in the years beyond 2026. A first impactful lever, which we began to discuss in more detail over the last six months, is the potential to increase CAFD per share contributions from our California gas fleet as we contract open capacity in the fleet to deliver resource adequacy, or RA, in 2027 and beyond.

Our natural gas assets are some of the most modern and clean plants in California and are located in extremely useful locations where they provide peaking generation and RA capacity to help ensure the grid’s reliability during periods of high demand and harmonize the system with increasing renewable penetration. In recent years, tight capacity conditions in the western U.S., coupled with thoughtful system planning from regulators, have put a particular focus on the need for load-serving entities to procure clean, dispatchable capacity from plants like ours. Together, these dynamics are allowing us to extend and enhance the revenue profile from our plants at levels that increase the CAFD per share contribution that we receive from each unit of their scarce and valuable capacity. Against that backdrop, we are pleased to announce today our first RA contract signings of the year for the fleet with approximately 200 megawatts of new resource adequacy contracts signed for Marsh Landing and Walnut Creek.

The new contracts add tenor to our fleet’s contracted position over 2027 to 2030, bringing it up to 52% for 2027 at pricing reflective of today’s market for one-in-four-year RA contracts with delivery beginning in late 2026. With these contracts now complete, we continue to retain 875 megawatts of gas unit capacity for RA delivery in 2027 and 1,645 megawatts of capacity available for RA delivery over 2028 to 2030. From here, over the balance of 2024, we will continue to market the balance of the fleet’s open position for varying contract durations over 2027 to 2030 through both bilateral engagements and through the state’s central procurement entity RFP process. Our core strategy is focused on striking a sensible balance between extending contracted visibility for dividend planning while also ensuring that the plants receive revenues reflective of the system value they deliver.

In that strategy, we will aim to continue our practice of incrementally contracting forward in a way that provides high visibility through two years forward while seeking that right balance of visibility and value. In the quarters to come, we’ll continue to update you on the status of our progress as we advance the marketing of our RA capacity and would anticipate having a more complete update on the outlook of what that capacity could deliver in 2027 CAFD per share contribution. In the meantime, we want to be measured about the commitments that we make to you about what exactly that will be. But to affirm what we outlined in our last November call and since, if we were to contract the balance of our open position at the same average pricing secured under these recent contracts, that could enable CWEN CAFD per share growth at the low end of 5% to 8% into 2027 without a need for additional capital investment.

Moving to Slide 9. In addition to organic growth and CAFD per share contribution from our gas fleet, we are beginning to look toward the other building blocks we can use to grow CAFD per share in 2027 and beyond. First among those building blocks is the ability for CWEN to invest in repowering, expansions, or hybridization of capacity around our existing well-sited fleet of renewable generation assets. We have had a track record of doing this successfully already with our wind fleet and now see an opportunity set of over 1.6 gigawatts of projects that Clearway Group and CWEN are evaluating for potential execution over the next five years.

As part of that opportunity set, we’re pleased to announce that CWEN has established an agreement with Clearway Group that aims to develop and build a family of contracted battery assets adjacent to CWEN’s existing fleet of solar projects in Utah, in what we hope is the first of many examples of how CWEN’s existing renewable project site inventory can, one day, house complementary battery capacity. The first phase of this framework, which we’re calling Honeycomb, targets completion of 320 megawatts of storage capacity by mid-2026 to serve a long-term tolling agreement with an investment-grade utility. The agreement provides CWEN with the right to invest in these projects at a 10% targeted CAFD yield if and when the projects reach a readiness for financial close and construction. Subject to CWEN investment and independent director approval, the expected CWEN investment opportunity for this initial 320-megawatt phase is presently estimated to be up to $85 million in corporate capital.

With funding of this potential project investment not expected to occur until the first half of 2026, we expect CWEN to be able to permanently fund this project with existing sources of liquidity, including retained CAFD and corporate debt capacity. To be clear, CWEN will only exercise this option to the extent it is CAFD and value accretive to CWEN shareholders when development is concluded and the projects are ready for a CWEN investment commitment decision. In addition to the opportunities for investment around CWEN’s existing assets, Clearway Group is advancing 4.4 gigawatts of late-stage newbuild project investment opportunities targeting CODs over 2026 to 2029 with the vast majority of the projects in markets where Clearway Group has a long track record of successful development execution. We are optimistic about where this family of projects can take CWEN’s growth prospects over time.

Very importantly, we want to emphasize that our planning for that growth will emphasize, first and foremost, our ability to grow in a way that is financially accretive to CWEN shareholders. The growth opportunities that we’ve outlined here are being planned thoughtfully in relation to CWEN’s historical capital allocation framework, which has served it very well over time in which we intend to continue. To restate that framework, when funding corporate capital commitments, CWEN will look to maximize CAFD per share, net of the cost of financing, while also assuring that investments meet long-term metrics aligned with its underwriting criteria. At a high level, we will source corporate growth capital from retained CAFD, to the extent available, as a first source of funds; followed by excess debt capacity, in line with our target BB rating as a second source of funds; and we will plan investments that call for external equity issuance, only when financial market conditions make us confident that an incremental investment funded via equity would be accretive to shareholders.

As has been demonstrated consistently over time since the inception of CWEN in 2018, Clearway Group as a sponsor for Clearway Energy, Inc. will continue to advance its pipeline of development, mindful of the goals and context of CWEN with pacing of development and corporate capital funding to optimize value accretion for CWEN shareholders. From the combination of these building blocks for growth, we hope to see forward to the ability to grow the CAFD per share and dividends per share that we delivered to our shareholders in 2027 and beyond, and we expect to provide further information as it becomes available later this year. With that, I’ll turn it over to Sarah for the financial update.

Sarah?

Sarah RubensteinChief Financial Officer

Thanks, Craig. On Slide 11, we provide an overview of our financial results, which includes first quarter adjusted EBITDA of $211 million and CAFD of $52 million. First quarter results reflected strong wind resource at the Alta facilities and the impact of timing of planned spring maintenance outages for certain gas plants which will occur during the second quarter. This is offset, in part, by lower solar irradiance from higher-than-average rainfall.

From a seasonality perspective, the first quarter is one of the smaller contributors to full-year results. We are pleased with these strong first quarter results. And considering the smaller impact of first quarter, the previously mentioned timing impacts, and our observations on second quarter performance to date, we are reaffirming our full-year 2024 CAFD guidance of $395 million. 2024 CAFD guidance continues to reflect P50 median renewable energy production for the full year, as well as contributions from committed growth investments based on expected COD timing.

The company continues to have no external capital needs to fund the line-of-sight growth needed to meet our dividends per share growth objectives through 2026 and pro forma credit metrics, in line with target ratings. With anticipated contributions from the remaining drop-down offers, line-of-sight CAFD remains at $435 million or $2.15 per share. In addition, Clearway continues to demonstrate progress toward growth beyond the $2.15 with the additional RA contracts previously mentioned and potential for additional contracting at favorable rates, as well as further opportunities for drop-downs, for example, the Honeycomb battery asset expansion project that we previously discussed. We do anticipate that drop-downs targeted for 2026 and beyond will require a source of external capital, and we expect to be able to utilize retained CAFD, to the extent available, excess corporate debt capacity while maintaining our target credit metrics and availability under our revolving credit facility.

Depending on the relevant timing, we may also consider the use of our existing ATM facility. Now I’ll turn it back to Craig for closing remarks.

Craig CorneliusPresident and Chief Executive Officer, Clearway Energy Group

Thank you, Sarah. Turning to Slide 13. I’ll recap where we stand in making progress toward meeting the key goals that we’ve set for Clearway Energy, Inc. this year.

Thanks to our solid first quarter results, CWEN remains on track to meet its 2024 CAFD guidance and its 2024 EPS growth goal of 7%. Beyond 2024, our path to $2.15 of CAFD per share looks increasingly clear on the back of the commitments CWEN has now made for investments in Dan’s Mountain and Rosamond South and with an eye to the current and pending offers that would finish allocation of the proceeds received from the sale of our district thermal business. Furthermore, we are in excellent position toward firming up our ability to grow CAFD per share within our long-term target of 5% to 8% in 2027. The new RA contracts we signed at strong pricing and the joint development agreement signed for development of the Honeycomb battery assets are the beginning of additional data points that we’ll share on our post-2026 growth outlook as we go through the year.

Lastly, we continue to evaluate opportunistic third-party M&A while adhering to our disciplined capital investment underwriting standards. Through these initiatives for future value creation and disciplined execution in our current core business, we are focused on delivering good outcomes for the shareholders of Clearway Energy, Inc., meeting the goals that we had set for this year and out through 2026, and extending on those in the years that follow. We are pleased with the momentum that we built in 2024 thus far and look forward to extending on that momentum in the days ahead. Operator, please open the lines for questions.

Questions & Answers:

Operator

Thank you. [Operator instructions] Our first question comes from Michael Lonegan with Evercore ISI. You may proceed.

Michael LoneganEvercore ISI — Analyst

Hi. Thanks for taking my question, and congrats on a great update. So you talked about the new contract terms that Walnut Creek and Marsh Landing, providing higher CAFD than run rate expectations. Just wondering if you could give us a sense how much higher, maybe in percentage terms, they were and with continued contracting at these levels change, how aggressively you pursue drop-down over this time frame or third-party M&A, given the organic growth.

Craig CorneliusPresident and Chief Executive Officer, Clearway Energy Group

Maybe to take your question in each of those two parts, first, being that we are in the middle of an annual procurement cycle for California through the central procurement entity process, which is seeking to establish sources of supply for the needs of load-serving entities into the ’27 and period beyond 2027, it’s not really to the advantage of the company for us to go into detail around the pricing that we’re securing and the contracts that we’ve already executed bilaterally. I think our vision here is that we’ll go through that procurement cycle, and as we go further into this year, provide an update on our outlook of CAFD per share contribution from the business as a whole after we’ve seen the results of that procurement cycle. So I think for the benefit of the shareholders, we’ll stay focused on giving you an outlook in aggregate later. We also have an obligation toward our customers to maintain confidentiality on the term — those contracts for their benefit, as well as ours.

So hopefully, you can understand that outlook. But we’re quite happy with what we’ve secured in those contracts to date, and we feel quite good about the setup of the overall market and the way it would value these resources that we have that we’re in a position to be able to offer. I think with respect to further growth investments, as we’ve noted before, we want to be very deliberate about pacing new commitments based on the accretiveness of the sources of capital that we have available to us. And I think you’re right to note that there is a relationship between the CAFD contribution that we’d expect from the resource adequacy capacity that we have on those units and the amount of retained CAFD that we would have to allocate, and hopefully, also with that, the value of our underlying equity and our overall corporate debt capacity.

So I think we’ll think about all those things in relation to each other as we pace additional investment commitments but feel quite good about the fact that we have sufficient building blocks in development to offer CWEN numerous opportunities for growth provided that those investment opportunities are accretive.

Michael LoneganEvercore ISI — Analyst

Great. Thank you. And then secondly for me, given all the data center demand, I just wonder if we could expect you to pursue third-party M&A opportunities for gas generation, in addition to the renewables for storage you have planned.

Craig CorneliusPresident and Chief Executive Officer, Clearway Energy Group

No. I think what we would like to do for the moment is to describe the overall strategy that we have for engagement and the particular ways that we pursue the execution of that opportunity set at Clearway. I think we’ll address in due time when we’ve got specific new commitments to be able to reference. As you can imagine, being one of the country’s largest developers and owner-operators of clean electricity generation assets with a footprint that spans most of the country’s major power markets, Clearway’s enterprise obviously occupies a place at the intersection of the emerging trend for load growth and energy value expansion as the U.S.

economy’s appetite for computation grows. And our footprint and our development pipeline and our proven capabilities certainly put us in a position where engagement with the country’s leading data center developers and hyperscalers is a pretty customary and core part of our origination and development. So engagements with those customers are most certainly ongoing, and those are around a spectrum of potential opportunities and with a range of potential partners and customers, but it would be premature at this stage to comment pretty specifically on the way that that attractive opportunity set would be something we prosecute within Clearway’s context or with specific growth capital investments by CWEN. I think what we can say is that we do have a pretty significant set of building blocks that can potentially support both behind-the-meter and front-of-the-meter project configurations in demand and that we’re also advancing projects that will serve traditional load-serving entities who have a need for increased carbon-free energy supply to serve growing data center load and that they are exhibiting a high degree of flexibility around what they would be prepared to accommodate the contractual structures and settlement terms and pricing and locations, given the substantial needs that they have for beating load curve.

And I think just the last thing that I’d note is that from among the 4.4 gigawatts of late-stage opportunities that we’ve identified previously, as you can imagine, many of those are in the major markets where this need is exhibited and that we have a pretty strong track record for execution in those geographies, which is something that customers like that certainly be valued.

Michael LoneganEvercore ISI — Analyst

Great. Thanks for taking my questions.

Operator

Thank you. One moment for questions. Our next question comes from Noah Kaye with Oppenheimer. You may proceed.

Noah KayeOppenheimer and Company — Analyst

Hey, thanks. Chris, congratulations, and best of luck in your next stage, and thanks for the dialogue over the years. And Craig, congratulations as well. My first question is really around the transition itself.

Maybe just talk to — a little bit how you operationalize the transition. Obviously, your keeping it seems the investment in management principles of the platform, very much intact. But, Craig, maybe just talk a little bit about your focus areas and how we should think about you kind of coming into this role while still continuing to drive all the development and growth of the sponsor, along with the team.

Craig CorneliusPresident and Chief Executive Officer, Clearway Energy Group

Yes. No. And I think all of us at Clearway could not be in greater accord with you about the really incredible track record of value creation that Chris’ tenure here has spanned. I think this is actually an extraordinarily smooth transition process.

As Chris and I had noted together when we had the opportunity to talk with you and others when we denounced our succession, this is a business that we built together over more than a decade. The people who, together, comprised of nearly 1,000 employees of Clearway in aggregate have been colleagues to each other over that 10 years, in many cases, even more time. And we operate already as a very integrated enterprise and everything from our approach to financial planning to our underwriting and structuring of individual assets to our planning of corporate capital allocation and long-term dividend policy. So in a lot of respects, the management of this enterprise has been a joint collaboration of Chris and I over time, and it reflects collaboration of people across the nation and in pretty much every respect.

Everybody is continuing to do their work in the way that they did before, so I think this transition is actually about as smooth as you possibly could imagine. And as you’ve noted, I think a key hallmark for us in terms of capital allocation and planning for Clearway Energy, Inc. is that we will continue on with the business model that has been very successful for us to date. So that’s absolutely a starting point.

I think we are at a juncture here now where we have the opportunity to look ahead. And I think to the extent that there are new things afoot, it’s really going to be a function of what the dynamic energy markets provide us as an opportunity, and we feel quite good about what those can ultimately provide for Clearway Energy, Inc. as we look forward.

Noah KayeOppenheimer and Company — Analyst

Hoping you could give us an update, wearing one of your hats on the development side. We’ve heard from some of the equipment providers into the solar space so far this quarter around some project delays. And obviously, there’s just very robust demand for power, given one of my peer’s earlier comments around data center and other load growth. But just talk about what you’re seeing in terms of bottlenecks, gating factors, and how you’re viewing kind of the timetables and trajectory for the key projects you have under development.

Craig CorneliusPresident and Chief Executive Officer, Clearway Energy Group

Yes. I mean I think one of the things that we’re very proud of about Clearway as we built it up over time is just the overall quality of craftsmanship that we bring to our work in every dimension, which includes the way that we develop projects, structure them, and obtain supplies for them. I think something that we’ve demonstrated over the last five years is that, in general, we have demonstrated a thoughtfulness around potential risk and supply chain or policy disruptions that has allowed our company to continue executing projects where sometimes peers have been less able to do so. And I think that’s something that’s certainly occurring now again.

So we invested pretty heavily around high-voltage equipment supply over the course of the last few years. I think we did that ahead of peers which helps secure execution timetables for us and for the utility customers that we serve and need to interconnect us. I think we were pretty thoughtful about establishing domestic content supply chains for all of wind and solar and battery projects, which both can convey additional value and fundamental economic returns for projects, but also assure that the projects can be executed when policy changes may make it more difficult to import certain equipment. And again, we’ve done that.

We previously announced that we had established domestic content supply chains, for example, for solar and for battery projects. And that’s — those supply chains are absolutely going to help us underpin the execution timetables that we have projects for over the late-stage pipeline we identified through 2026 and 2027. And I think, as you’re probably alluding to, with respect to potential near-term disruptions for solar projects, we don’t face a risk of those based on the more recent solar trade cases that have been formulated based on the format of the supply chains that we’re maintaining and our contractual relationships in the format of that trade case. So we feel very good about fulfillment to the projects that we’ve offered already, the new ones that have — that are pending offer and the timetables that are shown here, and we feel also very good about the family of supply chain solutions that are required to continue to advance the 4.4 gigawatts of late-stage projects that we’ve identified for growth over ’26 to ’29.

Noah KayeOppenheimer and Company — Analyst

Very clear and detailed.

Operator

Thank you. [Operator Instructions] One moment for questions. Our next question comes from Alex Kania with Marathon Capital. You may proceed.

Alex KaniaMarathon Capital — Analyst

Hey, good morning. First of all, again, congrats, both Chris and Craig, to kind of the new future roles and everything. So that’s great. Maybe as kind of thinking about the battery opportunities, certainly with this the new framework for development — joint development of effectively, I guess, retrofitting battery to existing renewables, I was just wondering if you could talk a little bit more about what that opportunity means in a greater context among the whole portfolio.

And then what was the kind of maybe financial thoughts behind moving forward with that as are battery prices low enough and return is high enough that this makes a lot of sense today, maybe even preferable to other types of renewable development? I just want to kind of think about like where the batteries show up in the hierarchy of investment opportunities.

Craig CorneliusPresident and Chief Executive Officer, Clearway Energy Group

Yeah, sure. Well, I mean, I think something that you may have noticed over the course of the last few years was that Clearway surged a pretty substantial development investment campaign to create opportunities, both for greenfield construction of batteries, as well as increasingly additions to batteries at sites that already house operating renewable projects that are owned by CWEN. And we did that being a major incumbent in the West, recognizing that it was likely that regulators and load-serving entities would have a need to procure incremental capacity to be able to enhance grid reliability and that they would exhibit a preference to doing that, wherever possible with batteries. And that puts us in a position in those markets of the West to be able to execute revenue contract structures that are favorable, extremely favorable for the company in duration and settlement terms, as well as price.

And that’s something that you can see in the hybridized solar and battery projects that we’ve just completed this past year and which CWEN now has an ownership interest in, in California, the most recent set of projects that we’ve offered and signed commitments around in the case of Rosamond South and that are pending in the case of Luna Valley and Daggett 1. But it also includes situations like this one for the Utah projects, where acreage adjacent to our existing projects and grid capacity in those locations can accommodate additional batteries, and the types of duration on toll contracts for those batteries that we’re able to secure in a lot of respect are the most favorable types of tenors that can be achieved in today’s market because of how essential those battery resources are. With respect to costs, yeah, I think we’ve been really collectively pleased across the industry about the continuing improvements in performance efficacy and safety of batteries, as well as the cost structure for manufacturing and delivering them and constructing them. It’s reminiscent of the kind of evolution that we saw in the industry for solar over 2011 to 2015, and that cost structure and the execution experience that we, as a company, are growing and the industry is generally makes these resources, I think, extremely executable for construction and also high performing when in operation.

And so we really like the fact that we’ve got as many projects as we do, gigawatts of them, in the Western U.S. in places where load-serving entities and utilities need to firm those renewable resources with batteries and the kind of execution capability we’ve built up. So these are very attractive investment opportunities for CWEN in structure and return. And we hope that these first projects that we’re calling Honeycomb are the shape of a lot to come.

Alex KaniaMarathon Capital — Analyst

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. I would now like to turn the call back over to Craig Cornelius, incoming president and CEO of Clearway Energy, Inc. for closing remarks.

Craig CorneliusPresident and Chief Executive Officer, Clearway Energy Group

Thank you, everyone, for joining us today and for your ongoing support of Clearway Energy, Inc. We look forward to what the days ahead have in store and to our next conversation in the quarter ahead. Operator, you can close the call.

Operator

[Operator signoff]

Duration: 0 minutes

Call participants:

Chris SotosDirector, Investor Relations

Craig CorneliusPresident and Chief Executive Officer, Clearway Energy Group

Sarah RubensteinChief Financial Officer

Michael LoneganEvercore ISI — Analyst

Noah KayeOppenheimer and Company — Analyst

Alex KaniaMarathon Capital — Analyst

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