* To invest 350 bln DKK by 2027, vs 200 bln by 2025 before
* To more than quadruple installed renewable capacity in
decade
* Shares fall almost 5%; analyst says growth priced in
(Adds analysts, shares, detail, background)
By Tim Barsoe and Stine Jacobsen
COPENHAGEN, June 2 (Reuters) - Orsted, the
world's largest offshore wind farm developer, is ramping up its
investment in renewables to $57 billion by 2027, seeking to
become a global leader in green energy and fend off growing
competition.
The Danish firm, which sold its oil and gas business in
2017, has benefited hugely from policies to implement the 2015
Paris Agreement, a collective shot at limiting global warming.
But competition is heating up as utilities and energy firms,
including oil majors such as Total, BP and
Shell, accelerate spending on renewables.
Europe's biggest wind power generator Iberdrola
earlier this year pledged to spend 150 billion euros ($182
billion) by 2030 to triple its renewable capacity and double its
network assets.
Orsted, which has installed more than a quarter of the
world's offshore wind capacity, said on Wednesday it planned to
invest 350 billion Danish crowns ($57 billion) by 2027, up from
a previous target of 200 billion crowns by 2025.
"Our aspiration is to become the world's leading green
energy major by 2030," Chief Executive Mads Nipper, who joined
Orsted in January, told investors at a Capital Markets Day.
The company aims to more than quadruple its installed
renewable energy capacity over the next decade to 50 gigawatts
(GW), compared with its previous target of 30 GW, and escalate
expansion in areas such as onshore wind and green hydrogen.
"The question is if Orsted can keep their profitability when
the market is growing and the competition intensifies," said
Nordnet analyst Per Hansen.
At 1240 GMT, Orsted shares were down 4.8% at 881.6 crowns,
with Citi analysts saying the stock was already pricing in
strong growth despite growing competition.
Orsted is moving into more renewable energy areas as
customers increasingly ask for integrated green energy solutions
with, for example, both solar and wind, Nipper said.
It aims to become a global leader in green hydrogen - or
hydrogen produced by using renewable power - which is seen as
crucial in replacing fossil fuels in hard-to-decarbonise sectors
such as shipping, aviation and heavy industries like mining.
($1 = 6.1011 Danish crowns)
(Reporting by Tim Barsoe and Stine Jacobsen
Editing by David Goodman and Mark Potter)