Power generation France Thanks to former
Suez subsidiaries such as
Compagnie Nationale du Rhône (CNR),
Electrabel and (SHEM), GDF Suez is the second-largest
generator of electricity in France behind
EDF. The company indicated in December 2011 that of the group's production comes from sources that emit no CO2 principally
hydroelectricity (through CNR and SHEM) and
wind power, the latter of which both Gaz de France and Suez moved aggressively into in 2007 and 2008. Recently acquired subsidiaries include (majority stake), the
wind farm business of
Nass & Wind and
Erelia. The company also operates a natural gas-fired
combined cycle power plant (DK6) in
Dunkirk. With the stated aim of reaching a total production capacity of 10
GW by 2013, three gas-fired
thermal power plants at
Fos-sur-Mer,
Montoir-de-Bretagne and
Saint-Brieuc are currently in various stages of development, as is a
solar panel project in
Curbans. (and the fifth-largest generator in
Europe overall), as well as the largest non-
state owned generator in both
Brazil and
Thailand (thanks to majority stakes in
Engie Brasil and
Glow Energy respectively). The company also operates in
North and
Latin America through its Suez Energy International unit, as well as in other European and
Asian countries. The company generates electricity through various types of plants, including thermal power, nuclear power,
combined heat and power,
wind farms,
hydroelectric and
biomass. Engie is currently developing a $15.8 billion nuclear power plant in
Sinop, Turkey in partnership with
Itochu and
Mitsubishi Heavy Industries. Since 2012, Engie is also an Australian energy retailer, initially operating as Simply Energy and later
Engie Australia. In November 2016, Engie signed an agreement with Moroccan energy company Nareva. The two companies are planning to develop energy assets in North and Western Africa that will produce 5,000 and 6,000 megawatts. The plans will take place between 2020 and 2025. In December 2016, Engie announced that Azzour North One Independent Water & Power Project (IWPP) has started full commercial operations. The power and water plant is Kuwait's most efficient source of electricity. In January 2017, Engie was awarded the contract and achieved financial closing for the greenfield Fadhili independent power project (IPP) in Saudi Arabia, the most efficient cogeneration plant in the country.
Coal-fired power plants In October 2015, Engie announced that it will no longer build coal-fired power plants. Gérard Mestrallet said projects for which Engie had already entered into firm commitments would be honored, but projects, where contracts had not yet been signed, will de facto be suspended. As a result, Engie abandoned two coal-fired power plants projects in Ada Yumurtalik (
Turkey) and in Thabametsi (
South Africa). In February 2016, Engie announced the selling of its stakes in the Paiton power plant located in
Indonesia and in the Meenakshi power plant located in
India. Engie also announced the closing of the
Rugeley power station in
England. In May 2016 Engie CEO Isabelle Kocher told a French Senate committee that it was planning a gradual withdrawal from coal-fired generation over the coming years. This could include closure of, or sale of its stake in, the lignite-fired
Hazelwood Power Station in Victoria, Australia. Hazelwood power plant closed at the end of March 2017. Engie sold to Enea its Polaniec power plant, in Poland. In February 2019, Engie announced the definitive exit of all coal activities.
Renewable energy Engie's renewable installed capacity represented 19.5% of its
energy mix at the end of 2016. The Group's renewable energy mix is composed of hydropower, solar energy, onshore and offshore wind power, biomass, and geothermal sources. Engie has won bids for several solar and wind projects since 2016: a 338 MW solar project in India (April 2017), 209 MW in contracts for solar and wind projects in Mexico, and a 40 MW solar project in Peru. It has begun construction of the 100 MW Kathu solar park in South Africa. Engie invested in Heliatek, a German company pioneering technologies in organic photovoltaics, in September 2016. The Group also assumed 100% control of La Compagnie du Vent in March 2017, and a 30% stake in Unisun, a Chinese solar photovoltaics company, in April 2017. In Brazil, Engie's largest international hydroelectric project, and the fourth largest power plant in the country (3,750 MW) was inaugurated in December 2016. Engie built its first international geothermal power generation plant in Indonesia. In October 2016, Engie developed France's first marine geothermal power station in Marseilles. In May 2017, Mexico's ministry of energy awarded Engie three geothermal exploration permits. In February 2019, Engie announced plans to add 9 gigawatts (GW) of renewable energy generation capacity to its portfolio by 2021, as part of its plan to accelerate the investments in renewable and low carbon energies. In May 2019, Engie and Portuguese power company EDP announced the future creation of a 50-50 joint venture in offshore wind, starting with a total of 1.5 gigawatts (GW) under construction and 4 GW under development. Engie's
Willogoleche Wind Farm (119 MW) opened in South Australia on 30 July 2019. It also owns
Pelican Point (500 MW) and
Dry Creek (156 MW) gas-fired power stations and
Canunda Wind Farm (46 MW) in South Australia.
Belgium and
Engie agreed to extend the use of the country's nuclear reactors by 10 years after
Russia's invasion of Ukraine prompted Belgium's governing coalition to rethink plans to rely more on
natural gas in june 2023.
Renewable gas Engie covers the whole biomethane chain, from project development with farmers to distribution to the final clients. The group has announced that, by 2030, it would have invested 2 billion euros in renewable gas, 10% of which will be injected into the networks, and that it will produce 5 TWH a year of biomethane.
Natural gas In its historic activity of gas, Engie covers the whole gas chain, from exploration and production to distribution. It is the: • second-largest gas transportation network in Europe • largest gas distribution network in Europe • fifth largest
LNG portfolio in the world • largest LNG importer in Europe • second-largest LNG terminal operator in Europe. In November 2016, Engie and Statoil reached an agreement on the renegotiation of their long-term gas supply contracts to adapt them to the evolution of European natural gas markets and to better reflect current market rates. In 2016, Engie negotiated new contracts for gas supply around the world: an agreement with UkrTransGaz, Ukrainian
transmission system operator, on gas transmission and storage; an agreement with AES Andres to foster growth in LNG and natural gas sales in the Caribbean. Engie also committed the
Neptune, one of the two FSRU (floating storage and regasification units) of its fleet, to deliver LNG to the first floating LNG import terminal in Turkey. In China, after an LNG supply agreement with Beijing Gas, Engie is looking at opportunities in the underground gas storage to hold stocks to meet seasonal demand. The bunkering vessel
Engie Zeebrugge performed for the first time in the port of Zeebrugge, Belgium, in June 2017. It was the first to provide ship-to-ship supplies for LNG as fuel. In March 2017, Engie sold its licenses for shale gas exploration in the UK to petrochemicals firm Ineos, as part of its decarbonized strategy In May 2017, Engie enters into exclusive negotiations with Neptune Energy for the sale of its 70% interest in Exploration & Production International ("EPI"). In 2016, Engie signed a technical and commercial cooperation contract with Göteborg Energi to push further the industrialization of the dry biomass-to-gas production approach. Engie is also involved in the Ambigo project, the first dry biomass-to-gas project which will be located in Alkmaar, Netherlands. As a co-investor in the canceled
Nord Stream 2 project, Engie wrote off €987 million in April 2022.
Energy services Engie provides energy efficiency and environmental services. 90,000 of the group's employees are dedicated to these services. • Engineering: consulting, feasibility studies, engineering, project management and client support • Systems, installations and maintenance: electrical installations, industrial maintenance, air conditioning and refrigeration, and systems integration • Energetic services: energy efficiency, multi-technology maintenance management, cogeneration and facilities management • Housing services: cost-effective energy, energy performance improvements, renewable energy and thermal renovation • "Smart city": urban heating and cooling community systems, development of high-end technology, a streamlined energy mix, carbon footprint reduction of buildings • Micro grids and decentralized energy: local energy production and consumption systems, energy supply in isolated areas, residential self-consumption or in industrial and commercial sectors, eco-district • Green mobility: alternative fuels (NGV, bioNGV, hydrogen, etc.), charging stations for electric vehicles, transport infrastructures, smart transit systems and upstream design and planning In March 2017, Engie acquired the Dutch
EVBox, one of the suppliers in electric vehicle charging. Engie (50%) and Axium Infrastructure US (50%) won a 50-year concession to ensure the sustainable energy management of the
Ohio State University in Columbus, Ohio, one of the largest university campuses in the United States with 485 buildings.
Student accommodation In 2019, Engie won a contract from the
University of Leicester to oversee the development of 1,164 new student homes and the refurbishment of a grade II listed building to be used as office and study space, and the construction of a multi-storey car park and the creation of a new teaching and learning centre. ==Shareholder structure==