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Australians Back U.S. Renewables While Opportunities at Home Ebb

Australians Back Renewables in U.S. as Opportunities at Home Ebb

(Bloomberg) -- Some of Australia’s biggest funds are pouring money into U.S. clean-energy projects as they butt up against a shortage of green opportunities at home.

AustralianSuper, the country’s largest pension fund, recently joined Queensland Investment Corporation in a $1 billion funding round for Generate, a San Francisco-based green-finance company. And Construction and Building Unions Superannuation, another pension giant, made its first U.S. clean-power investments last year.

The investments come as the wildfires that charred an area about the size of New York State have put increasing pressure on funds to do more to fight global warming. The problem, investors say, is the Australian government isn’t promoting clean-energy development, leaving the nation without enough sizable projects to back.

“At this point the platforms of scale don’t exist in Australia,” said Nik Kemp, head of infrastructure at AustralianSuper. “The size of the U.S. market makes for a much larger market and much better long-term growth opportunities.”

Australians Back U.S. Renewables While Opportunities at Home Ebb

Clean-energy investments in Australia plummeted 38% last year to $6 billion, down from a record high in 2018. The decline came as Prime Minister Scott Morrison’s government, a staunch supporter of the coal industry, has opted not to set a more ambitious renewable energy target for the nation.

“There’s no driving force for future growth,” said Leonard Quong, head of Australia research for BloombergNEF.

Australians Back U.S. Renewables While Opportunities at Home Ebb

AustralianSuper, which manages more than A$180 billion ($119 billion), has been investing in the U.S. for more than a decade. The deal with Generate, announced earlier this month, was the pension fund’s first foray into the American renewable energy market. In conjunction with the funding, executives from AustralianSuper and QIC joined Generate’s board.

Cbus, which manages A$56 billion in retirement savings for construction workers, closed on investments with Capital Dynamics Inc. in July and August. The asset manager will use the funds to back solar and wind farms.

“We will look at more investment if the opportunities stack up,” Cbus Chief Investment Officer Kristian Fok said in an email.

--With assistance from Will Wade.

To contact the reporters on this story: Natalia Kniazhevich in New York at nkniazhevic2@bloomberg.net;Matthew Burgess in Melbourne at mburgess46@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Joe Ryan at jryan173@bloomberg.net, Reg Gale

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