NYSE:XIFR XPLR Infrastructure Q1 2024 Earnings Report $39.73 -0.32 (-0.80%) Closing price 03:59 PM EasternExtended Trading$39.67 -0.06 (-0.15%) As of 04:29 PM Eastern Extended trading is trading that happens on electronic markets outside of regular trading hours. This is a fair market value extended hours price provided by Polygon.io. Learn more. Earnings HistoryForecast Enerpac Tool Group EPS ResultsActual EPS$0.75Consensus EPS $0.12Beat/MissBeat by +$0.63One Year Ago EPS-$0.17Enerpac Tool Group Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$257.00 millionExpected Revenue$331.78 millionBeat/MissMissed by -$74.78 millionYoY Revenue Growth+4.90%Enerpac Tool Group Announcement DetailsQuarterQ1 2024Date4/22/2024TimeBefore Market OpensConference Call DateTuesday, April 23, 2024Conference Call Time9:00AM ETUpcoming EarningsEnerpac Tool Group's Q3 2025 earnings is scheduled for Monday, June 23, 2025, with a conference call scheduled on Tuesday, June 24, 2025 at 8:30 AM ET. Check back for transcripts, audio, and key financial metrics as they become available.Conference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptSlide DeckPress Release (8-K)Quarterly Report (10-Q)SEC FilingEarnings HistoryCompany ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by Enerpac Tool Group Q1 2024 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrApril 23, 2024 ShareLink copied to clipboard.There are 11 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Good morning, and welcome to the NextEra Energy and NextEra Energy Partners, LP First Quarter 2024 Earnings Call. All participants will be in listen only mode. Please note this event is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to Kristin Rose, Director of Investor Relations. Please go ahead. Speaker 100:00:43Thank you, Drew. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining our Q1 2024 combined financial results conference call for NextEra Energy and NextEra Energy Partners. With me this morning are John Ketchum, Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer of NextEra Energy Kirk Kruse, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer of NextEra Energy Rebecca Kiaba, President and Chief Executive Officer of NextEra Energy Resources and Mark Hixson, Executive Vice President of NextEra Energy, all of whom are also officers of NextEra Energy Partners as well as Armando Pimentel, President and Chief Executive Officer of Florida Power and Light Company. John will provide some opening remarks and then turn the call over to Kirk for a review of our Q1 results. Our executive team will then be available to answer your questions. Speaker 100:01:30We will be making forward looking statements during this call based on current expectations and assumptions, which are subject to risks and uncertainties. Actual results could differ materially from our forward looking statements if any of our key assumptions are incorrect or because of other factors discussed in today's earnings news release the comments made during this conference call and the Risk Factors section of the accompanying presentation or in our latest reports and filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, each of which can be found on our websites, www.nextEraenergy.comandwww.nextEraenergypartners.com. We do not undertake any duty to update any forward looking statements. Today's presentation also includes references to non GAAP financial measures. You should refer to the information contained in the slides accompanying today's presentation for definitional information and reconciliations of historical non GAAP financial measures to the closest GAAP financial measure. Speaker 100:02:26With that, I will turn the call over to John. Speaker 200:02:30Thanks, Kristen, and good morning. NextEra Energy delivered strong first quarter results, growing adjusted earnings per share by 8.3% year over year. Based on FPL and Energy Resources' financial and operational performance, we're once again off to a solid start for the year. In addition, FPL placed into service 1640 Megawatts of New Solar, while Energy Resources added 2,765 Megawatts of new renewables and storage projects to its backlog. This quarter marks Energy Resources' 2nd best origination quarter ever as well as its best solar and best storage origination quarter. Speaker 200:03:20As we highlighted at our March Renewables Development Day, we believe NextEra Energy is well positioned for the expected strong power demand growth through the end of the decade and beyond. After years of relatively flat U. S. Power growth, numerous reports now highlight significant future load growth being driven across industries such as oil and gas, manufacturing and technology. The redomestication of industry in the U. Speaker 200:03:51S. Supported by public policy will drive the need for more electricity. And the tech industry is going to need data centers to support the expected cloud capacity demands that come with artificial intelligence applications. Of course, increased load demand will not come all at once and will take some time to materialize, but it is clear that many new customers are concerned about power availability to meet their plans and consider power supply as a significant obstacle to business expansion. We believe renewables and storage are a key enabler to help meet this increased demand. Speaker 200:04:35In fact, we believe the U. S. Renewables storage market opportunity has the potential to be 3x bigger over the next 7 years compared to the last 7, growing from roughly 140 gigawatts of additions to approximately 3.75 to 4.50 gigawatts. And we believe no one is better positioned to address these power supply challenges and capitalize on this demand shareholders. Our enterprise wide scale, decades of experience and technology investments are key competitive advantages that allow us to drive value and meet this expected power demand. Speaker 200:05:33Scale is one of our key differentiators and it matters more than ever. Scale allows us to buy and build with better pricing, better protections and better positioning to navigate disruption. Scale provides access to capital and cost of capital advantages, allowing us to leverage one of the strongest balance sheets in the sector and worldwide banking relationships to finance projects at beneficial terms. Scale has driven operational performance throughout our generation fleet. Today, NextEra Energy's roughly 74 gigawatt operating fleet comprised of 35 gigawatts at FPL and 39 gigawatts at Energy Resources provides significant operational scale. Speaker 200:06:23As FPL continues its solar and storage build out and Energy Resources brings new renewables and storage projects online for customers, the operating fleet could grow to over 100 gigawatts by the end of 2026. This would further extend our scale advantages and create value for customers and shareholders. Our scale has enabled greater supply chain diversification and flexibility. And the good news is the solar supply chain is much improved from 2 years ago. Inflationary pressures are alleviating and manufacturing capacity is significantly expanding. Speaker 200:07:03In the U. S. Manufacturing incentives are expected to support increases in domestic module manufacturing capacity to over 50 gigawatts by 2026 from just under 8 gigawatts at the end of 2021. We have greater supplier diversity and flexibility than ever before, strengthening our ability to bring low cost solar to American consumers and businesses. Our decades of experience is another key competitive advantage. Speaker 200:07:35Our experience allows us to navigate power demand challenges, delivering cost effective, reliable generation for our growing FPL customer base and designing clean energy solutions to help our energy resources customers. We understand every part of the energy value chain with deep expertise in all technologies, the power markets and transmission. Our team embraces continuous improvement that drives innovation. We recognized the changing landscape and secured land, interconnects and transmission equipment years in advance. Technology is the next frontier for the power industry, and we believe our 2 decade head start on the rest of the industry is a significant competitive advantage. Speaker 200:08:26Today, NextEra Energy captures 560,000,000,000 operational data points each day and has dozens of proprietary artificial intelligence tools to drive analytical real time decision making. We use these tools to analyze over 100 attributes of our own data to secure and develop the best sites in Florida and across the country. We use our tools to iterate millions of site layout designs based on proprietary resource data and assessments to maximize value. And we use our tools to operate nearly all our renewable storage and fossil generation fleets around the clock from our headquarters in South Florida. We are leveraging this combination of enterprise wide scale, decades of experience and investment in technology to better position both businesses to capitalize on what we believe will be years demand to drive long term value for customers and shareholders. Speaker 200:09:30Today, electricity represents just 20% of overall US energy consumption and wind and solar generation represents only 16% of the US electricity mix. In short, we believe the U. S. Will need a significant and growing amount of electricity over the next decade and beyond, a large part of which will be powered by new renewables and storage. At FPL, as more people move into Florida, we are focused on extending the customer value proposition by keeping our bills as low as possible and delivering clean affordable energy by investing in solar, battery storage and transmission. Speaker 200:10:13At Energy Resources, our business is focusing on building low cost wind, solar, battery storage and transmission. We are using our data and proprietary technology to help power customers, balance supply and demand, while keeping customer bills affordable. We also use our tools with commercial and industrial customers to identify the best locations based on their physical preferences and most important variables. For both power and commercial and industrial customers, we leverage our 300 gigawatt development pipeline and transmission and market expertise to help design the lowest cost clean energy solutions. Both businesses complement each other, deepen our skill sets and advantages and foster innovation. Speaker 200:11:03And we leverage our greatest asset, our people, who have decades of experience to drive value for our customers and shareholders. When I consider current energy demands, the long term electricity needs and our competitive advantages, I wouldn't trade our opportunity set with anyone. I look forward to telling more of our story and explaining why NextEra Energy is uniquely positioned to lead the electrification of the U. S. Economy at our Investor Day on June 11 in New York City. Speaker 200:11:34With that, I will turn the call over to Kirk to cover the quarterly results. Speaker 300:11:40Thank you, John. For the Q1 of 2024, FPL's earnings per share increased $0.04 year over year. The principal driver of this performance was FPL's regulatory capital employed growth of approximately 11.5% year over year. We now expect FPL to realize roughly 10% average annual growth in regulatory capital employed over our current rate agreements 4 year term, which runs through 2025. FPL's capital expenditures were approximately $2,300,000,000 for the quarter and we expect FPL's full year 2024 capital investments to be between $7,800,000,000 $8,800,000,000 For the 12 months ending March 2024, FPL's reported ROE for regulatory purposes will be approximately 11.8%. Speaker 300:12:39During the Q1, we utilized approximately $572,000,000 of reserve amortization, leaving FPL with a balance of roughly $651,000,000 As we've previously discussed, FPL historically utilizes more reserve amortization in the first half of the year and we expect this trend to continue this year. Earlier this month, FPL received approval to reduce customer bills due to projected 2024 fuel savings. As a result, FPL's typical 1,000 kilowatt hour residential customer bill is expected to be roughly $14 lower in May than the start of the year and approximately 37% lower than the current national average. Over the current 4 year settlement agreement, we now expect FPL's capital investment to be slightly above our previous range of $32,000,000,000 to $34,000,000,000 This quarter, FPL placed into service 16 40 Megawatts of new cost effective solar, putting FPL's owned and operated solar portfolio at over 6,400 Megawatts, which is the largest utility owned solar portfolio in the country. FPL's annual 10 year site plan continues to indicate that solar and storage are the most cost effective answer for customers to add reliable grid capacity over the next decade. Speaker 300:14:19The 2024 plan includes similar levels of new solar generation capacity, 21 gigawatts across our service territory over the next 10 years compared to our 2023 plan. But our 2024 plan doubles the expected deployment of battery storage to over 4 gigawatts, some of which we expect to be needed earlier than forecasted in our 2023 plan. With this plan, expect to increase FPL solar mix from approximately 6% of our total generation in 2023 to 38% in 2,033, while continuing to provide customers with clean, affordable energy. FPL believes battery storage will play an increasingly valuable role for customers, serving as an attractive capacity complement to our growing solar generation. From providing system balancing needs and critical parts of FPL service territory to supplying energy during any time of day or weather condition. Speaker 300:15:29Battery storage acts as a key resource to the system that is both valuable and cost effective for customers. Key indicators show Florida's economy remains healthy. Florida continues to be one of the fastest growing states in the nation and had 4 of the 5 fastest growing U. S. Metro areas between 20222023. Speaker 300:15:56FPL had its strongest quarter of customer growth in over 15 years with the average number of customers increasing by more than 100,000 from the comparable prior year period. Although FPL's 1st quarter retail sales decreased by approximately 1.3% year over year, we estimate that weather had a negative impact on usage per customer of approximately 5.4% on a year over year basis. After taking weather into account, 1st quarter retail sales increased roughly 4.1% on a weather normalized basis from the comparable prior year period, driven primarily by continued favorable underlying population growth and usage for customer. Now let's turn to Energy Resources, which reported adjusted earnings growth of approximately 13.1% year over year. Contributions from new investments increased $0.15 per share year over year, primarily reflecting continued growth in our renewables portfolio. Speaker 300:17:05Our existing clean energy portfolio declined $0.02 per share, primarily due to unfavorable wind resource during the quarter. The comparative contribution from our customer supply business increased results by $0.04 per share. All other impacts reduced earnings by $0.12 per share. This decline reflects higher interest cost of $0.07 per share, half of which related to new borrowing costs to support new investments. Energy Resources had a strong quarter of new renewables and storage origination, adding approximately 2,000 765 Megawatts to the backlog. Speaker 300:17:46With these additions, our backlog now totals roughly 21 0.5 gigawatts after taking into account 11 65 megawatts of new projects placed into service since our last earnings call, highlighting Energy Resources' ability to continue to identify attractive and accretive investment opportunities, which provide strong growth visibility in the years ahead. We recently plugged 7 40 megawatts of new solar and storage projects into service, which are being used to support data centers located in Arizona and New Mexico. Both of these projects are now one of the largest battery storage facilities in their respective states and in combination with their co located solar. Each project enabled the local utility to serve their customers' need for new reliable, clean energy to grow their own business operation. We are proud to continue to support our power and commercial and industrial customers to meet their growing power and capacity needs, create jobs and provide economic development in these local communities. Speaker 300:19:00Our origination activities across our power and commercial and industrial customers are beginning to reflect the rising power demand. We are seeing it manifest with our power customers in their state RFP processes and bilateral discussions where we deliver cost effective renewables and storage to their grid. We are also observing it through interactions with our oil and gas and manufacturing customers where we utilize our data and technology to help them make better siting decisions. Our technology customers have been a consistent driver of demand for many years, reflected by our roughly 3 gigawatt operating portfolio and over 3 gigawatt project backlog as we partner with them to provide various clean energy solutions based on their key business variables. We are a partner with both our power and commercial industrial customers trust. Speaker 300:19:56Can leverage our 3 gigawatt development pipeline, our 35 gigawatt operating renewables and storage portfolio and our transformer and switchgear procurement covering energy resources build through 2027 to deliver projects for customers. As John said, the power demand growth is expected to be strong through at least the end of the decade. We expect 2024 to be another strong year for new renewables and storage origination. This is on the heels of 2 consecutive record origination years at Energy Resources. We continue to expect to remain on track Speaker 400:20:36for our Speaker 300:20:36overall renewable development expectations of roughly 33 gigawatts to 42 gigawatts from 2023 through 2026. Beyond renewables and storage, NextEra Energy Transmissions was recently selected by the California ISO to develop a new A2 mile 500 kV transmission line in Southern California with capital investment of more than $250,000,000 We believe this project could unlock over 3 gigawatts of new renewable generation capacity supporting California's ambitious clean energy goals. This award falls a record year for NextEra Energy Transmission in 2023, and we remain excited about the opportunities ahead for this growing business. We continue to believe our ability to build, own and operate transmission is a key advantage for our renewables business. Turning now to our Q1 2024 consolidated results. Speaker 300:21:38Adjusted earnings from corporate and other decreased by $0.01 per share year over year. This quarter, we entered into an agreement to transfer approximately $1,000,000,000 of tax credits throughout 2024, representing the bulk of our expected transfers for the year. Our long term financial expectations remain unchanged. We will be disappointed if we are not able to deliver financial results at or near the top end of our adjusted EPS expectation ranges in 2024, 2025 and 2026. From 2021 to 2026, we continue to expect that our average annual growth in operating cash flow will be at or above our adjusted EPS compound annual growth rate range. Speaker 300:22:24And as we announced in February, the Board of Directors of NextEra Energy approved a targeted growth rate in dividends per share of roughly 10% per year through at least 20.26 off a 2024 base. As always, our expectations assume our caveat. Turning to NxThera Energy Partners. We continue to focus on executing against the partnership's transition plan and delivering an LP distribution growth target of 6% through at least 2026. We bought out the STX Midstream Convertible Equity Portfolio financing in 2023 and have sufficient proceeds available from the Texas pipeline portfolio sale to complete the Net Renewables 2 buyout due in June 2024 2025. Speaker 300:23:14The 3rd convertible equity portfolio financing associated with the ME Natural Gas Pipeline asset is expected to be addressed in 2025. With a plan for the near term convertible export portfolio financings well understood, we remain focused on the partnership's cost of capital improving, which is critical for its success. With that objective in mind, we continue to evaluate alternatives to address the remaining convertible equity portfolio financing with equity buyout obligations in 2027 beyond. Turning to the partnership's targeted 6% growth in LP distributions per unit, Nexera Energy Partners does not expect to need an acquisition this year to achieve its 6% targeted growth rate, and the partnership does not expect to require growth equity until 2027. In terms of NextEra Energy Partners' growth plan, as a reminder, it involves organic growth, specifically repowerings of approximately 1.3 gigawatts of wind projects through 2026, as well as acquiring assets at attractive yields. Speaker 300:24:23Today, we are announcing plans to repower an additional approximately 100 megawatts of wind facilities through 2026. The partnership has now announced roughly 10 85 megawatts of repower. Yesterday, NextEra Energy Partners Board declared a quarterly distribution of $0.8925 per common unit or $3.57 per common unit on an annualized basis, which reflects an annualized increase of 6% from its Q4 2023 distribution per common unit. Let me now turn to the detailed results. 1st quarter adjusted EBITDA was $462,000,000 and cash available for distribution was $164,000,000 New projects, which primarily reflect contributions from approximately 8.40 net megawatts of new projects that either closed in the Q2 of 2023 or achieved commercial operations in 2023 contributed approximately $32,000,000 of adjusted EBITDA, $7,000,000 of cash available for distribution. Speaker 300:25:341st quarter adjusted EBITDA contribution from existing projects declined by approximately $37,000,000 year over year, driven primarily by unfavorable wind resource during the quarter and lower generation at Genesis solar project as a result of a planned outage for major maintenance. Wind resource was approximately 97% of long term average versus 102% in the Q1 of 2023. The incentive distribution provided approximately $39,000,000 of benefit this quarter for adjusted EBITDA and cash available for distribution. Finally, adjusted EBITDA and cash available for distribution declined by approximately $44,000,000 $38,000,000 respectively for the divestiture of the Texas pipeline portfolio. From a base of our Q4 2023 distribution for common unit and an annualized rate of $3.52 we continue to see 5% to 8% growth per year in LP distributions per unit with a current target of 6% growth per year as being a reasonable range of expectation through at least 2026. Speaker 300:26:45We continue to expect the partnership's payout ratio to be in the mid-90s through 2026. We expect the annualized rate of the Q4 5 to be $3.73 per common unit. NextEra Energy Partners expects run rate contributions for adjusted EBITDA and cash available for distribution from its forecasted portfolio at December 31, 2024 to be in the ranges of 1.9 $1,000,000,000 to $2,100,000,000 $730,000,000 to $820,000,000 respectively. As a reminder, year end 2024 run rate projections reflect calendar year 2025 contribution from the forecasted portfolio at year end 2024. As a reminder, our expectations are subject to our caveats. Speaker 300:27:37That concludes our prepared remarks. And with that, we will open the line for questions. Operator00:27:44Thank you. We will now begin the question and answer session. The first question comes from Steve Fleishman with Wolfe Research. Please go ahead. Speaker 500:28:27Yes, hi. Thank you. Just first question, just there's been press case to be filed related to solar panels and Biden also talking about getting rid of the protection on the bifacial panel tariff. Could you just talk a little bit more about how you're positioned to deal with those cases if they do arise, changes if they arise? Thanks. Speaker 200:29:04Sure. Steve, this is John. I'll go ahead and take that. Let me take those in order. Let me talk about, first of all, the speculation around AD CVD filing, which may or may not occur and then the bifacial exemption. Speaker 200:29:16But first on the AD CVD, the bottom line takeaway for folks is that we don't we expect that any trade actions that would occur this time around will be very manageable. And for several reasons, I'm going to go through them. This is not like Circumvention. This is not Circumvention 2.0. The solar panel market is in a very different spot. Speaker 200:29:45And the first point I want to make is we don't expect any trade action if it were to occur to result in delivery stoppages. And in any event, our panels are delivered well in advance of construction, which gives us a lot of time and opportunity to be able to troubleshoot any issues should they arise. And why do I think no stoppages are going to occur this time around? The main reason is the U. S. Speaker 200:30:17Is the most expensive solar panel market in the world. And so there's a lot of economic reasons for deliveries to continue to occur. The second point I want to make is that given our scale, we have appropriate incentives and contractual protections that are in place in our agreements with our suppliers to ensure that delivery occurs timely. And we also don't put all of our eggs in one basket. We have a diversified set of suppliers as you would all expect and the ability to pivot from one supplier to another should any issues occur. Speaker 200:31:03So I feel like in very good spot there. 3rd point I want to make and it's one that I hit in my prepared remarks is that the U. S. And the global supply of solar panels is bigger than ever and it's growing. And let me talk, for example, about the U. Speaker 200:31:24S. Market specifically. The U. S. Domestic solar panel industry is getting stronger and stronger than it's ever been. Speaker 200:31:34One of the points that I made also in the prepared remarks is at the end of 'twenty one, module solar panel module capacity in the U. S. Was about 8 gigawatts. That's expected to be about 50 gigawatts by the time we get to 2026. So the U. Speaker 200:31:53S. Market is in a much different spot. There's already been 150 gigawatts of new U. S. Solar panel factory announcements that have been made. Speaker 200:32:03If you talk to most U. S. Domestic solar panel manufacturers, They're sold out through 2026, so they're certainly not having any trouble with demand, which is the other point that I want to make. So now let's speculate a little bit. So if a filing is made around antidumping, let me deal with that first. Speaker 200:32:28We find it hard to believe that any panels are being dumped into the U. S. Market under the law that would be applied. As I said, the U. S. Speaker 200:32:39Is the most expensive solar panel market in the world. It's 2 to 3 times higher than any other market in the world. And if panels were being dumped, that could not be the case. So that's the first point I want to make on antidumping. The second point I want to make, if there were a countervailing duty claim filed, the Department of Commerce would first have to look in to see if the price of solar modules in Southeast Asian countries, for example, were being subsidized. Speaker 200:33:18We don't really have any idea or way of knowing that until we see what gets filed. But after we see those countervailing duties historically, I mean, if you look at examples for countervailing duties that have been applied in the past against China suppliers, they've typically been around 10% to 15%. So even if those were to be applied in this case quite manageable. And the other point I want to make is that what's different is tariffs in this situation would be prospective and not retroactive. And so for all of these reasons, even if something were to move forward, we still have no way of knowing if it will. Speaker 200:34:12We are very well positioned to manage through this like we always do. Our inventory position and the contractual protections that we have in place are expected to give us strong coverage for our backlog through 2027. And by that time, as more and more U. S. Production comes online as expected, these trade issues will fall away. Speaker 200:34:37So that's AD, CVD. Let me just turn quickly to a couple of minor comments on the bifacial exemption. The bottom line, the bifacial exemption, even if it's removed, really has no impact on NxThera. Why is that? We've contracted all of our panel needs through February 26, and we have very minimal exposure to the bifacial exemption being removed. Speaker 200:35:08And once that bifacial exemption, even if removed, it would expire at the end of February of 2026 and it can't be brought again and reinstated for another 8 years. So we feel like we're in a very good spot. And the last point I'll make is, as more and more U. S. Production capacity comes online and it's actually available by, we will continue to source from U. Speaker 200:35:39S. Suppliers. So look, when you put all those things together, feel like this is very manageable and feel like we will be fine. Speaker 500:35:52That was very thorough and helpful. Thank you, John. And then I guess one other question on the data center. So you talked about the backlog edge you had this quarter. Just as we go into this year and think about this, are we is this going to continue to be more kind of one off or 2 off quarter by quarter updates? Speaker 500:36:14Or is there should we see more kind of potential for more like long dated partnerships or kind of larger scale agreements? How should we think about how that might develop? Speaker 200:36:29I think kind of all of the above, Steve. Our opportunity set is significant around data centers is the point first point that I'll make. And I think if you look historically on what we've been able to do with data center customers, I don't think anybody's had better results than we have. I mean, if you look at just our gigawatts in operation, we have 3.5 gigawatts in operation today. We have another 3 close to 3.5 gigawatts in our backlog with technology providers. Speaker 200:37:03We really understand their business. We really understand what it is they need. And part of that is because we spend a lot of time with them. We do business with all the what I would call the top 5 hyperscalers in this country, also doing business increasingly with some of the developers of data centers as well. And we've owned data centers. Speaker 200:37:25And so we understand how they work, how they operate, what the CapEx and OpEx is and how it's driven by energy and power and what the right locations are for them. We see We see about a 15% CAGR through the end of the decade for data center demand. I think data center developers are really focused more than anything on 3 things. They want low cost energy. They want to be able to say that they've accomplished additionality from a decarbonization standpoint, which requires a new facility to be built, not an existing facility. Speaker 200:38:09And 3rd piece is it's got to be in the right location and it's got to have speed to market. And there's obviously been a lot of talk about renewables and nuclear. And I do want to I'm a little more of a skeptic about nukes and let me explain why that is. They're already in the ground, you can't move them. And if you look at the nuclear fleet, there's only 15 nuclear plants in this country that are west of the Mississippi. Speaker 200:38:39And when you think about the 15 that are west of Mississippi, most of them are already rate regulated or long term contracted. So that really is just creating maybe an East Coast opportunity for those that aren't rate regulated and that aren't contracted. I think that's a small subset of nuclear units that could perhaps satisfy East Coast demand. But in our discussions with data center providers, getting access to cloud capacity for Silicon Valley, Santa Clara in particular is critical. I mean, we can all count on 1 or 2 fingers how many nuclear plants are located in those regions, not many. Speaker 200:39:23And you just can't move a nuclear plant. And so with the thing we bring to the table is a lot of flexibility and speed to market. We can put the renewable project exactly where it needs to be. And SMRs, I hear a lot of talk about SMRs. SMRs are still a decade to 15 years away. Speaker 200:39:44Not only do you have 9 OEMs that are really struggling to access capital, if we pass a sanctions bill against Russia, a nuclear fuel that's going to limit conversion enrichment capacity in the U. S. For sourcing of nuclear fuel for these SMRs, which also is going to require a real step up in technology to get them done. You're also dealing with undercapitalized fuel providers. I'm a real skeptic on SMRs really coming into the picture to satisfy data center demand anytime in the near future. Speaker 200:40:22And so when you put all of that together, I think the right answer is renewables and our discussions with data center developers and providers, their first focus is renewables. And I hear a lot about the reliability concerns and well, what do you do when the wind doesn't blow and the sun doesn't shine and the 4 hour battery is not enough. We can overbuild the battery. We can also help work with them to design a clean energy solution where if they do have a grid by, we can green it up with RECs from our green desk. We have technology and tools, which we showcased back in March, where we can identify parts in the country that not only the best resource areas, but also the best fiber connectivity, the best water resource. Speaker 200:41:09And those are the areas that we're locking up. And we have the sites and we have the relationships. And so I don't think anybody is better positioned to capitalize on data center demand than NextEra is, and I'm very excited about what the future electricity demand is real this electricity demand is real. We've been in a period of static demand for decades. And the demand is not only coming from data centers, it's coming from decoupling from China, creating more domestic manufacturing around industry, around chip manufacturing, oil and gas industry continues to electrify. Speaker 200:41:58We continue to, even beyond data centers, see significant electric demand. We have the tools, we have the sites, we have the relationships and we are chasing those opportunities. And look, we're coming off our 2nd best origination quarter ever. I think the results speak for themselves. Speaker 500:42:18Great. Thank you. Operator00:42:20The next question comes from Shahriar Pourreza with Guggenheim Partners. Please go Speaker 400:42:27ahead. Hey, good morning guys. Speaker 300:42:30Good morning, Shahriar. Speaker 400:42:31Sir. Good morning. Just maybe starting off on net, sort of given the continued pressure from capital markets and kind of the benchmark rates, Are you sort of advancing any longer term resolution plans for the CPFs? I mean, have existing holders and maybe other infrastructure players showed any interest in transactions to fund and maybe simplify the cap structure for longer term growth? What could that look like? Speaker 400:42:58And is this sort of an Analyst Day disclosure? Thanks. Speaker 200:43:02Yes, sure. Thanks for the question. A few comments that I'll make on it. One is, we have talked about private capital raise potentially being a solution to address back end setups for NEP. Obviously, there's a lot of interest in that just given NxThera's stature in the market, Nextera Energy Partners' stature in the market. Speaker 200:43:28And so those discussions continue to move forward. We don't have anything to say about them right now. We may not have anything to say about them at the Analyst Day. I wouldn't expect us to make a whole lot of comments at the Analyst Day about NEP. When we do have something to say about NEP, as these discussions continue to evolve, we will address them at that point. Speaker 400:43:54Okay, perfect. So we'll stay tuned. And then lastly, John, on sort of the FECs, since the process disclosures have been made and obviously showed, you know, FP and L was clear of getting kind of wrongdoing. There were some kind of disagreements with the FEC commissioners on the non profit matters. Is there an appeals path and would there be any further kind of information request to SP and L or NextEra or should we just close the books here? Speaker 200:44:22Yes. I think the way I look at it, Char, is plain and simple. FEC voted. They voted to close the matter. We're now moving on, and I think this is behind us. Speaker 400:44:35Okay, perfect. That's it. Very comprehensive. Thank you guys and congrats on the results. Speaker 300:44:40Thank you. Operator00:44:43The next question comes from David Arcaro with Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead. Mr. Arcaro, your line is open. Is your phone muted accidentally? Operator00:45:04I'm sorry, we'll need to go to the next questioner. The next questioner comes from Carly Davenport with Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead. Speaker 600:45:18Wanted to just ask one on the backlog, good strength in the additions this quarter and we continue to see a lot of strength in the solar and the storage piece of it. Wind has been a little bit weaker. So I guess just as you think about the difference in the returns on those projects, are there any sort of implications for your financial guidance and your plan as you think about the mix that you've seen actually evolve versus what is in that base plan? Speaker 700:45:42Hi, Carly, it's Rebecca. I'll take that question. Good morning. Let me start with probably the most important takeaways first. Obviously, Kirk and John highlighted our continued expectations and expressed the fact that we'd be disappointed if we didn't meet the top end of those expectations as we've outlined. Speaker 700:46:02So that's most important. Secondly, we continue to be comfortable with the overall development expectations as we also highlighted in the prepared remarks and that's consistent with what we've seen over time. As we've long stated, obviously, there's a mix in technologies. We, 4 years in advance, are not always going to be predicting exactly where we're going to be able to develop and what our customers are going to be interested in. And notably, since we laid those expectations out for the first time, a lot did change, including the passage of the IRA, and that had both an impact on engine dynamics for our customers buying wind, which was largely in advance. Speaker 700:46:45The expectations that the incentives would ultimately wind down and in the IRA introduction of the production tax credit for solar, which made solar more attractive than it was even before, as well as a standalone ITC for storage. So that really spurred demand for solar and storage. But if I can kind of take a step back and kind of pile into the question that Steve answered and some of the comments that John made earlier, we are seeing significant demand across the entire U. S. Economy. Speaker 700:47:17That of course includes data centers, technology, AI driven compute demand, but it is also manufacturing, the redomestication of the important industries in the U. S. And it is also oil and gas and chemicals companies looking to get lower cost energy solutions into their mix. That spurs a need for a lot of build. So as we look at our 300 gigawatts of products that are in development and the integrated solutions and solutions that we're designing for our customers, I remain very optimistic about all of the technologies. Speaker 700:47:51In various parts of the country, wind is most economic. In parts of the country, it's going to be solar and storage, etcetera. So I love the portfolio approach. And from a returns perspective, I think we continue to realize very attractive returns for all the technologies, and of course, adjusted for the types of risks that we think we take. So mid teens for solar and above 20% levered returns for wind and storage technologies. Speaker 700:48:20So I think from an investor standpoint, that's a very attractive proposition. Speaker 600:48:26Awesome. Thanks for that, Rebecca. And then you mentioned in the prepared or the last question, 15 percent CAGR for data center demand growth through the end of the decade. I guess as you think about some of these other drivers that you've mentioned of increased power demand in the U. S, How do you think that will drive kind of overall load growth? Speaker 600:48:45Do you have expectations there through the end of the decade? Speaker 700:48:48So we'll have a lot more to say in terms of our expectations and certainly in context of a number of third party views at the investor conference. But I think it's safe to say at this point that we see strong drivers for a long period of time, decades into the future, driving renewables penetration in electricity and electricity penetration into overall U. S. And energy consumption, which sets up terrific dynamics for us to continue to compete and create opportunities to invest capital for our shareholders at very attractive returns. So I love our opportunity set. Speaker 600:49:25Great. Thank you for that color. Thank you. Operator00:49:30The next question comes from Durgesh Chopra with Evercore ISI. Please go ahead. Speaker 800:49:37Good morning. Thank you for giving me time. Maybe just, Rebecca, on the topic of electricity demand growth, one of the questions we consistently get, and I think John ended on this, the 15% data center growth driving it is how quickly can you ramp up? So maybe can you just talk to that? Are there any constraints, whether it's equipment, whether it's sites? Speaker 800:49:59How quickly can the generation side of this, the renewable generation can ramp up? Speaker 700:50:07Yes, Durgesh, I appreciate the question. I think a little bit of context is important. I think all of us, and ourselves included, have really started talking about the significant change in load growth really over the last year, maybe even the last 6 months. And you all very much appreciate that a development business, anything connecting to electrical infrastructure usually talks in terms of years and sometimes a lot of years depending on the market. To get something into place in the ERCOT market is maybe a couple of years and some markets in the Midwest that have had congested queues and some transmission constraints that could be 5 to 7 years. Speaker 700:50:47And obviously, we've been working for a period of time. I think we're the least behind of anybody with our 300 gigawatt portfolio, but some of this will take some time to materialize. I feel very confident in the long term trends. I feel really excited and pleased with our team's preparedness in terms of the development of that pipeline. And I very much think our competitive advantages that John highlighted on scale, experience and technology really position us well in the types of conversations we're having with our customers, creating this long term visibility into demand dynamics. Speaker 700:51:25You guys asked John a question about data centers and how competitive we are with them. They are not looking for projects anymore. They are looking for integrated solutions that solve long term problems for them, and we are a perfect partner for them, with which to work. Speaker 800:51:43That's very helpful, Rebecca. And then maybe just a quick follow-up. I think you made comments around very healthy returns. Are you seeing high returns, higher margins with your data center clients versus your other clients? I mean, several of your peers have highlighted high returns there. Speaker 800:52:01Maybe just comment on that? Speaker 700:52:03I continue to believe we have very attractive returns across the board, consistent with the comments that I've made today as well as the comments we made at our development 101 day and included in our monthly updates for investor materials. So mid teens and solar and above 20% for both wind and storage. Of course, as we talk with customers and we have unique solutions that solve particular problems that we have, We design the solutions to meet those needs and always stay focused at the end of the day on what's the attractive value proposition from an investor standpoint. We remain disciplined around that. So I love the portfolio, I love positioning, and I believe what we ultimately deliver for investors is very attractive. Speaker 800:52:51That is very helpful. Thank you very much. Operator00:52:54The next question comes from Jeremy Tonet with JPMorgan. Please go Speaker 200:53:03ahead. Operator00:53:07Excuse me, Mr. Tournay, your line is open. Is your phone open? Speaker 300:53:11Good morning. Thank you. Speaker 900:53:17Just want to start off on storage originations coming in quite strong and if there's any Speaker 700:53:26Hey, Jeremy, it's Rebecca. I'm going to go for the presumptive close on the answer. Hopefully, it's the question you actually asked. Storage origination is very strong. As Kirk highlighted in some of the prepared remarks and John commented in Q and A, as we think about our customers' need for energy and capacity, it remains a very attractive value proposition to incorporate storage to firm up renewables either co located or separate. Speaker 700:53:55So we're seeing terrific origination from an energy resources perspective. And we've also talked today about the attractiveness of storage at FPL. So I'll hand it off to Armando to give some additional color. Speaker 1000:54:07Thanks, Rebecca. So I would add, if you recall John and Kurt's comments, we filed our 10 year site plan, which we do every year. Our 10 year site plan this year had the same amount of solar that it did last year, which is a lot of solar, 21 gigs over the next 10 years. But we doubled the amount of storage up to 4 gigawatts of storage that we have in our plan. We increasingly see storage as a economical addition in our service area. Speaker 1000:54:41My expectations are that as time goes on that we would likely add more storage to our plans going forward because it is that attractive in the overall economics, especially as we add solar, which again continues to be the best proposition from a cost standpoint for our customers. Speaker 900:55:07Thank you for that. And just going back to the Renewable Development Day, or for people that weren't able to make any particular points want to highlight? Speaker 700:55:23Jeremy, you broke up a little bit. So I'm going to again guess a little bit on what the question was. But I'm assuming it was what were some of the key takeaways from the Development 101 Day. And I hope it was a worthwhile time for our investors. We certainly were so proud of our team and talking about what it is that we believe differentiates us as we talk to our customers. Speaker 700:55:46And it really was around that scale experience and technology, not just individually how all of those are important, but also how they interact with one another. So as John highlighted, the scale advantages comes the ability to deploy technologies that are unique. And with experience, we actually are able to invest in capturing that data that we get from scale and put it in technologies to actually get some really cool insights. So I think the key takeaway from my perspective is significant load growth, certainly some opportunities to put deploy that scale experience at technology to deploy unique and compelling solutions to our customers. So I love our growth prospects. Speaker 700:56:29I love the position we have just as John highlighted in his comments and look forward to telling you more at the Investor Conference in June. Speaker 900:56:38Great. Thank you very much. Operator00:56:42This concludes our question and answer session and the NextEra Energy and NextEra Energy Partners LP Earnings Conference Call. Thank you for attending today's presentation. You may now disconnect.Read moreRemove AdsPowered by Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallEnerpac Tool Group Q1 202400:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xRemove Ads Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckPress Release(8-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) Enerpac Tool Group Earnings HeadlinesEnerpac Tool Group Corp. 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Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Enerpac Tool Group and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About Enerpac Tool GroupEnerpac Tool Group (NYSE:EPAC) manufactures and sells a range of industrial products and solutions in the United States, the United Kingdom, Germany, Australia, Canada, China, Saudi Arabia, Brazil, France, and internationally. It operates through Industrial Tools & Services and Other segments. The Industrial Tools & Services segment designs, manufactures, and distributes branded hydraulic and mechanical tools; and provides services and tool rentals to the infrastructure, industrial maintenance, repair and operations, oil and gas, mining, alternative and renewable energy, civil construction, and other markets. It also offers branded tools and engineered heavy lifting technology solutions, and hydraulic torque wrenches; maintenance and manpower services; high-force hydraulic and mechanical tools, including cylinders, pumps, valves, and specialty tools; and bolt tensioners and other miscellaneous products. This segment markets its branded tools and services primarily under the Enerpac, Hydratight, Larzep, and Simplex brands. The Other segment designs and manufactures synthetic ropes and biomedical textiles. The company was formerly known as Actuant Corporation and changed its name to Enerpac Tool Group Corp. in January 2020. 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There are 11 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Good morning, and welcome to the NextEra Energy and NextEra Energy Partners, LP First Quarter 2024 Earnings Call. All participants will be in listen only mode. Please note this event is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to Kristin Rose, Director of Investor Relations. Please go ahead. Speaker 100:00:43Thank you, Drew. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining our Q1 2024 combined financial results conference call for NextEra Energy and NextEra Energy Partners. With me this morning are John Ketchum, Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer of NextEra Energy Kirk Kruse, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer of NextEra Energy Rebecca Kiaba, President and Chief Executive Officer of NextEra Energy Resources and Mark Hixson, Executive Vice President of NextEra Energy, all of whom are also officers of NextEra Energy Partners as well as Armando Pimentel, President and Chief Executive Officer of Florida Power and Light Company. John will provide some opening remarks and then turn the call over to Kirk for a review of our Q1 results. Our executive team will then be available to answer your questions. Speaker 100:01:30We will be making forward looking statements during this call based on current expectations and assumptions, which are subject to risks and uncertainties. Actual results could differ materially from our forward looking statements if any of our key assumptions are incorrect or because of other factors discussed in today's earnings news release the comments made during this conference call and the Risk Factors section of the accompanying presentation or in our latest reports and filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, each of which can be found on our websites, www.nextEraenergy.comandwww.nextEraenergypartners.com. We do not undertake any duty to update any forward looking statements. Today's presentation also includes references to non GAAP financial measures. You should refer to the information contained in the slides accompanying today's presentation for definitional information and reconciliations of historical non GAAP financial measures to the closest GAAP financial measure. Speaker 100:02:26With that, I will turn the call over to John. Speaker 200:02:30Thanks, Kristen, and good morning. NextEra Energy delivered strong first quarter results, growing adjusted earnings per share by 8.3% year over year. Based on FPL and Energy Resources' financial and operational performance, we're once again off to a solid start for the year. In addition, FPL placed into service 1640 Megawatts of New Solar, while Energy Resources added 2,765 Megawatts of new renewables and storage projects to its backlog. This quarter marks Energy Resources' 2nd best origination quarter ever as well as its best solar and best storage origination quarter. Speaker 200:03:20As we highlighted at our March Renewables Development Day, we believe NextEra Energy is well positioned for the expected strong power demand growth through the end of the decade and beyond. After years of relatively flat U. S. Power growth, numerous reports now highlight significant future load growth being driven across industries such as oil and gas, manufacturing and technology. The redomestication of industry in the U. Speaker 200:03:51S. Supported by public policy will drive the need for more electricity. And the tech industry is going to need data centers to support the expected cloud capacity demands that come with artificial intelligence applications. Of course, increased load demand will not come all at once and will take some time to materialize, but it is clear that many new customers are concerned about power availability to meet their plans and consider power supply as a significant obstacle to business expansion. We believe renewables and storage are a key enabler to help meet this increased demand. Speaker 200:04:35In fact, we believe the U. S. Renewables storage market opportunity has the potential to be 3x bigger over the next 7 years compared to the last 7, growing from roughly 140 gigawatts of additions to approximately 3.75 to 4.50 gigawatts. And we believe no one is better positioned to address these power supply challenges and capitalize on this demand shareholders. Our enterprise wide scale, decades of experience and technology investments are key competitive advantages that allow us to drive value and meet this expected power demand. Speaker 200:05:33Scale is one of our key differentiators and it matters more than ever. Scale allows us to buy and build with better pricing, better protections and better positioning to navigate disruption. Scale provides access to capital and cost of capital advantages, allowing us to leverage one of the strongest balance sheets in the sector and worldwide banking relationships to finance projects at beneficial terms. Scale has driven operational performance throughout our generation fleet. Today, NextEra Energy's roughly 74 gigawatt operating fleet comprised of 35 gigawatts at FPL and 39 gigawatts at Energy Resources provides significant operational scale. Speaker 200:06:23As FPL continues its solar and storage build out and Energy Resources brings new renewables and storage projects online for customers, the operating fleet could grow to over 100 gigawatts by the end of 2026. This would further extend our scale advantages and create value for customers and shareholders. Our scale has enabled greater supply chain diversification and flexibility. And the good news is the solar supply chain is much improved from 2 years ago. Inflationary pressures are alleviating and manufacturing capacity is significantly expanding. Speaker 200:07:03In the U. S. Manufacturing incentives are expected to support increases in domestic module manufacturing capacity to over 50 gigawatts by 2026 from just under 8 gigawatts at the end of 2021. We have greater supplier diversity and flexibility than ever before, strengthening our ability to bring low cost solar to American consumers and businesses. Our decades of experience is another key competitive advantage. Speaker 200:07:35Our experience allows us to navigate power demand challenges, delivering cost effective, reliable generation for our growing FPL customer base and designing clean energy solutions to help our energy resources customers. We understand every part of the energy value chain with deep expertise in all technologies, the power markets and transmission. Our team embraces continuous improvement that drives innovation. We recognized the changing landscape and secured land, interconnects and transmission equipment years in advance. Technology is the next frontier for the power industry, and we believe our 2 decade head start on the rest of the industry is a significant competitive advantage. Speaker 200:08:26Today, NextEra Energy captures 560,000,000,000 operational data points each day and has dozens of proprietary artificial intelligence tools to drive analytical real time decision making. We use these tools to analyze over 100 attributes of our own data to secure and develop the best sites in Florida and across the country. We use our tools to iterate millions of site layout designs based on proprietary resource data and assessments to maximize value. And we use our tools to operate nearly all our renewable storage and fossil generation fleets around the clock from our headquarters in South Florida. We are leveraging this combination of enterprise wide scale, decades of experience and investment in technology to better position both businesses to capitalize on what we believe will be years demand to drive long term value for customers and shareholders. Speaker 200:09:30Today, electricity represents just 20% of overall US energy consumption and wind and solar generation represents only 16% of the US electricity mix. In short, we believe the U. S. Will need a significant and growing amount of electricity over the next decade and beyond, a large part of which will be powered by new renewables and storage. At FPL, as more people move into Florida, we are focused on extending the customer value proposition by keeping our bills as low as possible and delivering clean affordable energy by investing in solar, battery storage and transmission. Speaker 200:10:13At Energy Resources, our business is focusing on building low cost wind, solar, battery storage and transmission. We are using our data and proprietary technology to help power customers, balance supply and demand, while keeping customer bills affordable. We also use our tools with commercial and industrial customers to identify the best locations based on their physical preferences and most important variables. For both power and commercial and industrial customers, we leverage our 300 gigawatt development pipeline and transmission and market expertise to help design the lowest cost clean energy solutions. Both businesses complement each other, deepen our skill sets and advantages and foster innovation. Speaker 200:11:03And we leverage our greatest asset, our people, who have decades of experience to drive value for our customers and shareholders. When I consider current energy demands, the long term electricity needs and our competitive advantages, I wouldn't trade our opportunity set with anyone. I look forward to telling more of our story and explaining why NextEra Energy is uniquely positioned to lead the electrification of the U. S. Economy at our Investor Day on June 11 in New York City. Speaker 200:11:34With that, I will turn the call over to Kirk to cover the quarterly results. Speaker 300:11:40Thank you, John. For the Q1 of 2024, FPL's earnings per share increased $0.04 year over year. The principal driver of this performance was FPL's regulatory capital employed growth of approximately 11.5% year over year. We now expect FPL to realize roughly 10% average annual growth in regulatory capital employed over our current rate agreements 4 year term, which runs through 2025. FPL's capital expenditures were approximately $2,300,000,000 for the quarter and we expect FPL's full year 2024 capital investments to be between $7,800,000,000 $8,800,000,000 For the 12 months ending March 2024, FPL's reported ROE for regulatory purposes will be approximately 11.8%. Speaker 300:12:39During the Q1, we utilized approximately $572,000,000 of reserve amortization, leaving FPL with a balance of roughly $651,000,000 As we've previously discussed, FPL historically utilizes more reserve amortization in the first half of the year and we expect this trend to continue this year. Earlier this month, FPL received approval to reduce customer bills due to projected 2024 fuel savings. As a result, FPL's typical 1,000 kilowatt hour residential customer bill is expected to be roughly $14 lower in May than the start of the year and approximately 37% lower than the current national average. Over the current 4 year settlement agreement, we now expect FPL's capital investment to be slightly above our previous range of $32,000,000,000 to $34,000,000,000 This quarter, FPL placed into service 16 40 Megawatts of new cost effective solar, putting FPL's owned and operated solar portfolio at over 6,400 Megawatts, which is the largest utility owned solar portfolio in the country. FPL's annual 10 year site plan continues to indicate that solar and storage are the most cost effective answer for customers to add reliable grid capacity over the next decade. Speaker 300:14:19The 2024 plan includes similar levels of new solar generation capacity, 21 gigawatts across our service territory over the next 10 years compared to our 2023 plan. But our 2024 plan doubles the expected deployment of battery storage to over 4 gigawatts, some of which we expect to be needed earlier than forecasted in our 2023 plan. With this plan, expect to increase FPL solar mix from approximately 6% of our total generation in 2023 to 38% in 2,033, while continuing to provide customers with clean, affordable energy. FPL believes battery storage will play an increasingly valuable role for customers, serving as an attractive capacity complement to our growing solar generation. From providing system balancing needs and critical parts of FPL service territory to supplying energy during any time of day or weather condition. Speaker 300:15:29Battery storage acts as a key resource to the system that is both valuable and cost effective for customers. Key indicators show Florida's economy remains healthy. Florida continues to be one of the fastest growing states in the nation and had 4 of the 5 fastest growing U. S. Metro areas between 20222023. Speaker 300:15:56FPL had its strongest quarter of customer growth in over 15 years with the average number of customers increasing by more than 100,000 from the comparable prior year period. Although FPL's 1st quarter retail sales decreased by approximately 1.3% year over year, we estimate that weather had a negative impact on usage per customer of approximately 5.4% on a year over year basis. After taking weather into account, 1st quarter retail sales increased roughly 4.1% on a weather normalized basis from the comparable prior year period, driven primarily by continued favorable underlying population growth and usage for customer. Now let's turn to Energy Resources, which reported adjusted earnings growth of approximately 13.1% year over year. Contributions from new investments increased $0.15 per share year over year, primarily reflecting continued growth in our renewables portfolio. Speaker 300:17:05Our existing clean energy portfolio declined $0.02 per share, primarily due to unfavorable wind resource during the quarter. The comparative contribution from our customer supply business increased results by $0.04 per share. All other impacts reduced earnings by $0.12 per share. This decline reflects higher interest cost of $0.07 per share, half of which related to new borrowing costs to support new investments. Energy Resources had a strong quarter of new renewables and storage origination, adding approximately 2,000 765 Megawatts to the backlog. Speaker 300:17:46With these additions, our backlog now totals roughly 21 0.5 gigawatts after taking into account 11 65 megawatts of new projects placed into service since our last earnings call, highlighting Energy Resources' ability to continue to identify attractive and accretive investment opportunities, which provide strong growth visibility in the years ahead. We recently plugged 7 40 megawatts of new solar and storage projects into service, which are being used to support data centers located in Arizona and New Mexico. Both of these projects are now one of the largest battery storage facilities in their respective states and in combination with their co located solar. Each project enabled the local utility to serve their customers' need for new reliable, clean energy to grow their own business operation. We are proud to continue to support our power and commercial and industrial customers to meet their growing power and capacity needs, create jobs and provide economic development in these local communities. Speaker 300:19:00Our origination activities across our power and commercial and industrial customers are beginning to reflect the rising power demand. We are seeing it manifest with our power customers in their state RFP processes and bilateral discussions where we deliver cost effective renewables and storage to their grid. We are also observing it through interactions with our oil and gas and manufacturing customers where we utilize our data and technology to help them make better siting decisions. Our technology customers have been a consistent driver of demand for many years, reflected by our roughly 3 gigawatt operating portfolio and over 3 gigawatt project backlog as we partner with them to provide various clean energy solutions based on their key business variables. We are a partner with both our power and commercial industrial customers trust. Speaker 300:19:56Can leverage our 3 gigawatt development pipeline, our 35 gigawatt operating renewables and storage portfolio and our transformer and switchgear procurement covering energy resources build through 2027 to deliver projects for customers. As John said, the power demand growth is expected to be strong through at least the end of the decade. We expect 2024 to be another strong year for new renewables and storage origination. This is on the heels of 2 consecutive record origination years at Energy Resources. We continue to expect to remain on track Speaker 400:20:36for our Speaker 300:20:36overall renewable development expectations of roughly 33 gigawatts to 42 gigawatts from 2023 through 2026. Beyond renewables and storage, NextEra Energy Transmissions was recently selected by the California ISO to develop a new A2 mile 500 kV transmission line in Southern California with capital investment of more than $250,000,000 We believe this project could unlock over 3 gigawatts of new renewable generation capacity supporting California's ambitious clean energy goals. This award falls a record year for NextEra Energy Transmission in 2023, and we remain excited about the opportunities ahead for this growing business. We continue to believe our ability to build, own and operate transmission is a key advantage for our renewables business. Turning now to our Q1 2024 consolidated results. Speaker 300:21:38Adjusted earnings from corporate and other decreased by $0.01 per share year over year. This quarter, we entered into an agreement to transfer approximately $1,000,000,000 of tax credits throughout 2024, representing the bulk of our expected transfers for the year. Our long term financial expectations remain unchanged. We will be disappointed if we are not able to deliver financial results at or near the top end of our adjusted EPS expectation ranges in 2024, 2025 and 2026. From 2021 to 2026, we continue to expect that our average annual growth in operating cash flow will be at or above our adjusted EPS compound annual growth rate range. Speaker 300:22:24And as we announced in February, the Board of Directors of NextEra Energy approved a targeted growth rate in dividends per share of roughly 10% per year through at least 20.26 off a 2024 base. As always, our expectations assume our caveat. Turning to NxThera Energy Partners. We continue to focus on executing against the partnership's transition plan and delivering an LP distribution growth target of 6% through at least 2026. We bought out the STX Midstream Convertible Equity Portfolio financing in 2023 and have sufficient proceeds available from the Texas pipeline portfolio sale to complete the Net Renewables 2 buyout due in June 2024 2025. Speaker 300:23:14The 3rd convertible equity portfolio financing associated with the ME Natural Gas Pipeline asset is expected to be addressed in 2025. With a plan for the near term convertible export portfolio financings well understood, we remain focused on the partnership's cost of capital improving, which is critical for its success. With that objective in mind, we continue to evaluate alternatives to address the remaining convertible equity portfolio financing with equity buyout obligations in 2027 beyond. Turning to the partnership's targeted 6% growth in LP distributions per unit, Nexera Energy Partners does not expect to need an acquisition this year to achieve its 6% targeted growth rate, and the partnership does not expect to require growth equity until 2027. In terms of NextEra Energy Partners' growth plan, as a reminder, it involves organic growth, specifically repowerings of approximately 1.3 gigawatts of wind projects through 2026, as well as acquiring assets at attractive yields. Speaker 300:24:23Today, we are announcing plans to repower an additional approximately 100 megawatts of wind facilities through 2026. The partnership has now announced roughly 10 85 megawatts of repower. Yesterday, NextEra Energy Partners Board declared a quarterly distribution of $0.8925 per common unit or $3.57 per common unit on an annualized basis, which reflects an annualized increase of 6% from its Q4 2023 distribution per common unit. Let me now turn to the detailed results. 1st quarter adjusted EBITDA was $462,000,000 and cash available for distribution was $164,000,000 New projects, which primarily reflect contributions from approximately 8.40 net megawatts of new projects that either closed in the Q2 of 2023 or achieved commercial operations in 2023 contributed approximately $32,000,000 of adjusted EBITDA, $7,000,000 of cash available for distribution. Speaker 300:25:341st quarter adjusted EBITDA contribution from existing projects declined by approximately $37,000,000 year over year, driven primarily by unfavorable wind resource during the quarter and lower generation at Genesis solar project as a result of a planned outage for major maintenance. Wind resource was approximately 97% of long term average versus 102% in the Q1 of 2023. The incentive distribution provided approximately $39,000,000 of benefit this quarter for adjusted EBITDA and cash available for distribution. Finally, adjusted EBITDA and cash available for distribution declined by approximately $44,000,000 $38,000,000 respectively for the divestiture of the Texas pipeline portfolio. From a base of our Q4 2023 distribution for common unit and an annualized rate of $3.52 we continue to see 5% to 8% growth per year in LP distributions per unit with a current target of 6% growth per year as being a reasonable range of expectation through at least 2026. Speaker 300:26:45We continue to expect the partnership's payout ratio to be in the mid-90s through 2026. We expect the annualized rate of the Q4 5 to be $3.73 per common unit. NextEra Energy Partners expects run rate contributions for adjusted EBITDA and cash available for distribution from its forecasted portfolio at December 31, 2024 to be in the ranges of 1.9 $1,000,000,000 to $2,100,000,000 $730,000,000 to $820,000,000 respectively. As a reminder, year end 2024 run rate projections reflect calendar year 2025 contribution from the forecasted portfolio at year end 2024. As a reminder, our expectations are subject to our caveats. Speaker 300:27:37That concludes our prepared remarks. And with that, we will open the line for questions. Operator00:27:44Thank you. We will now begin the question and answer session. The first question comes from Steve Fleishman with Wolfe Research. Please go ahead. Speaker 500:28:27Yes, hi. Thank you. Just first question, just there's been press case to be filed related to solar panels and Biden also talking about getting rid of the protection on the bifacial panel tariff. Could you just talk a little bit more about how you're positioned to deal with those cases if they do arise, changes if they arise? Thanks. Speaker 200:29:04Sure. Steve, this is John. I'll go ahead and take that. Let me take those in order. Let me talk about, first of all, the speculation around AD CVD filing, which may or may not occur and then the bifacial exemption. Speaker 200:29:16But first on the AD CVD, the bottom line takeaway for folks is that we don't we expect that any trade actions that would occur this time around will be very manageable. And for several reasons, I'm going to go through them. This is not like Circumvention. This is not Circumvention 2.0. The solar panel market is in a very different spot. Speaker 200:29:45And the first point I want to make is we don't expect any trade action if it were to occur to result in delivery stoppages. And in any event, our panels are delivered well in advance of construction, which gives us a lot of time and opportunity to be able to troubleshoot any issues should they arise. And why do I think no stoppages are going to occur this time around? The main reason is the U. S. Speaker 200:30:17Is the most expensive solar panel market in the world. And so there's a lot of economic reasons for deliveries to continue to occur. The second point I want to make is that given our scale, we have appropriate incentives and contractual protections that are in place in our agreements with our suppliers to ensure that delivery occurs timely. And we also don't put all of our eggs in one basket. We have a diversified set of suppliers as you would all expect and the ability to pivot from one supplier to another should any issues occur. Speaker 200:31:03So I feel like in very good spot there. 3rd point I want to make and it's one that I hit in my prepared remarks is that the U. S. And the global supply of solar panels is bigger than ever and it's growing. And let me talk, for example, about the U. Speaker 200:31:24S. Market specifically. The U. S. Domestic solar panel industry is getting stronger and stronger than it's ever been. Speaker 200:31:34One of the points that I made also in the prepared remarks is at the end of 'twenty one, module solar panel module capacity in the U. S. Was about 8 gigawatts. That's expected to be about 50 gigawatts by the time we get to 2026. So the U. Speaker 200:31:53S. Market is in a much different spot. There's already been 150 gigawatts of new U. S. Solar panel factory announcements that have been made. Speaker 200:32:03If you talk to most U. S. Domestic solar panel manufacturers, They're sold out through 2026, so they're certainly not having any trouble with demand, which is the other point that I want to make. So now let's speculate a little bit. So if a filing is made around antidumping, let me deal with that first. Speaker 200:32:28We find it hard to believe that any panels are being dumped into the U. S. Market under the law that would be applied. As I said, the U. S. Speaker 200:32:39Is the most expensive solar panel market in the world. It's 2 to 3 times higher than any other market in the world. And if panels were being dumped, that could not be the case. So that's the first point I want to make on antidumping. The second point I want to make, if there were a countervailing duty claim filed, the Department of Commerce would first have to look in to see if the price of solar modules in Southeast Asian countries, for example, were being subsidized. Speaker 200:33:18We don't really have any idea or way of knowing that until we see what gets filed. But after we see those countervailing duties historically, I mean, if you look at examples for countervailing duties that have been applied in the past against China suppliers, they've typically been around 10% to 15%. So even if those were to be applied in this case quite manageable. And the other point I want to make is that what's different is tariffs in this situation would be prospective and not retroactive. And so for all of these reasons, even if something were to move forward, we still have no way of knowing if it will. Speaker 200:34:12We are very well positioned to manage through this like we always do. Our inventory position and the contractual protections that we have in place are expected to give us strong coverage for our backlog through 2027. And by that time, as more and more U. S. Production comes online as expected, these trade issues will fall away. Speaker 200:34:37So that's AD, CVD. Let me just turn quickly to a couple of minor comments on the bifacial exemption. The bottom line, the bifacial exemption, even if it's removed, really has no impact on NxThera. Why is that? We've contracted all of our panel needs through February 26, and we have very minimal exposure to the bifacial exemption being removed. Speaker 200:35:08And once that bifacial exemption, even if removed, it would expire at the end of February of 2026 and it can't be brought again and reinstated for another 8 years. So we feel like we're in a very good spot. And the last point I'll make is, as more and more U. S. Production capacity comes online and it's actually available by, we will continue to source from U. Speaker 200:35:39S. Suppliers. So look, when you put all those things together, feel like this is very manageable and feel like we will be fine. Speaker 500:35:52That was very thorough and helpful. Thank you, John. And then I guess one other question on the data center. So you talked about the backlog edge you had this quarter. Just as we go into this year and think about this, are we is this going to continue to be more kind of one off or 2 off quarter by quarter updates? Speaker 500:36:14Or is there should we see more kind of potential for more like long dated partnerships or kind of larger scale agreements? How should we think about how that might develop? Speaker 200:36:29I think kind of all of the above, Steve. Our opportunity set is significant around data centers is the point first point that I'll make. And I think if you look historically on what we've been able to do with data center customers, I don't think anybody's had better results than we have. I mean, if you look at just our gigawatts in operation, we have 3.5 gigawatts in operation today. We have another 3 close to 3.5 gigawatts in our backlog with technology providers. Speaker 200:37:03We really understand their business. We really understand what it is they need. And part of that is because we spend a lot of time with them. We do business with all the what I would call the top 5 hyperscalers in this country, also doing business increasingly with some of the developers of data centers as well. And we've owned data centers. Speaker 200:37:25And so we understand how they work, how they operate, what the CapEx and OpEx is and how it's driven by energy and power and what the right locations are for them. We see We see about a 15% CAGR through the end of the decade for data center demand. I think data center developers are really focused more than anything on 3 things. They want low cost energy. They want to be able to say that they've accomplished additionality from a decarbonization standpoint, which requires a new facility to be built, not an existing facility. Speaker 200:38:09And 3rd piece is it's got to be in the right location and it's got to have speed to market. And there's obviously been a lot of talk about renewables and nuclear. And I do want to I'm a little more of a skeptic about nukes and let me explain why that is. They're already in the ground, you can't move them. And if you look at the nuclear fleet, there's only 15 nuclear plants in this country that are west of the Mississippi. Speaker 200:38:39And when you think about the 15 that are west of Mississippi, most of them are already rate regulated or long term contracted. So that really is just creating maybe an East Coast opportunity for those that aren't rate regulated and that aren't contracted. I think that's a small subset of nuclear units that could perhaps satisfy East Coast demand. But in our discussions with data center providers, getting access to cloud capacity for Silicon Valley, Santa Clara in particular is critical. I mean, we can all count on 1 or 2 fingers how many nuclear plants are located in those regions, not many. Speaker 200:39:23And you just can't move a nuclear plant. And so with the thing we bring to the table is a lot of flexibility and speed to market. We can put the renewable project exactly where it needs to be. And SMRs, I hear a lot of talk about SMRs. SMRs are still a decade to 15 years away. Speaker 200:39:44Not only do you have 9 OEMs that are really struggling to access capital, if we pass a sanctions bill against Russia, a nuclear fuel that's going to limit conversion enrichment capacity in the U. S. For sourcing of nuclear fuel for these SMRs, which also is going to require a real step up in technology to get them done. You're also dealing with undercapitalized fuel providers. I'm a real skeptic on SMRs really coming into the picture to satisfy data center demand anytime in the near future. Speaker 200:40:22And so when you put all of that together, I think the right answer is renewables and our discussions with data center developers and providers, their first focus is renewables. And I hear a lot about the reliability concerns and well, what do you do when the wind doesn't blow and the sun doesn't shine and the 4 hour battery is not enough. We can overbuild the battery. We can also help work with them to design a clean energy solution where if they do have a grid by, we can green it up with RECs from our green desk. We have technology and tools, which we showcased back in March, where we can identify parts in the country that not only the best resource areas, but also the best fiber connectivity, the best water resource. Speaker 200:41:09And those are the areas that we're locking up. And we have the sites and we have the relationships. And so I don't think anybody is better positioned to capitalize on data center demand than NextEra is, and I'm very excited about what the future electricity demand is real this electricity demand is real. We've been in a period of static demand for decades. And the demand is not only coming from data centers, it's coming from decoupling from China, creating more domestic manufacturing around industry, around chip manufacturing, oil and gas industry continues to electrify. Speaker 200:41:58We continue to, even beyond data centers, see significant electric demand. We have the tools, we have the sites, we have the relationships and we are chasing those opportunities. And look, we're coming off our 2nd best origination quarter ever. I think the results speak for themselves. Speaker 500:42:18Great. Thank you. Operator00:42:20The next question comes from Shahriar Pourreza with Guggenheim Partners. Please go Speaker 400:42:27ahead. Hey, good morning guys. Speaker 300:42:30Good morning, Shahriar. Speaker 400:42:31Sir. Good morning. Just maybe starting off on net, sort of given the continued pressure from capital markets and kind of the benchmark rates, Are you sort of advancing any longer term resolution plans for the CPFs? I mean, have existing holders and maybe other infrastructure players showed any interest in transactions to fund and maybe simplify the cap structure for longer term growth? What could that look like? Speaker 400:42:58And is this sort of an Analyst Day disclosure? Thanks. Speaker 200:43:02Yes, sure. Thanks for the question. A few comments that I'll make on it. One is, we have talked about private capital raise potentially being a solution to address back end setups for NEP. Obviously, there's a lot of interest in that just given NxThera's stature in the market, Nextera Energy Partners' stature in the market. Speaker 200:43:28And so those discussions continue to move forward. We don't have anything to say about them right now. We may not have anything to say about them at the Analyst Day. I wouldn't expect us to make a whole lot of comments at the Analyst Day about NEP. When we do have something to say about NEP, as these discussions continue to evolve, we will address them at that point. Speaker 400:43:54Okay, perfect. So we'll stay tuned. And then lastly, John, on sort of the FECs, since the process disclosures have been made and obviously showed, you know, FP and L was clear of getting kind of wrongdoing. There were some kind of disagreements with the FEC commissioners on the non profit matters. Is there an appeals path and would there be any further kind of information request to SP and L or NextEra or should we just close the books here? Speaker 200:44:22Yes. I think the way I look at it, Char, is plain and simple. FEC voted. They voted to close the matter. We're now moving on, and I think this is behind us. Speaker 400:44:35Okay, perfect. That's it. Very comprehensive. Thank you guys and congrats on the results. Speaker 300:44:40Thank you. Operator00:44:43The next question comes from David Arcaro with Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead. Mr. Arcaro, your line is open. Is your phone muted accidentally? Operator00:45:04I'm sorry, we'll need to go to the next questioner. The next questioner comes from Carly Davenport with Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead. Speaker 600:45:18Wanted to just ask one on the backlog, good strength in the additions this quarter and we continue to see a lot of strength in the solar and the storage piece of it. Wind has been a little bit weaker. So I guess just as you think about the difference in the returns on those projects, are there any sort of implications for your financial guidance and your plan as you think about the mix that you've seen actually evolve versus what is in that base plan? Speaker 700:45:42Hi, Carly, it's Rebecca. I'll take that question. Good morning. Let me start with probably the most important takeaways first. Obviously, Kirk and John highlighted our continued expectations and expressed the fact that we'd be disappointed if we didn't meet the top end of those expectations as we've outlined. Speaker 700:46:02So that's most important. Secondly, we continue to be comfortable with the overall development expectations as we also highlighted in the prepared remarks and that's consistent with what we've seen over time. As we've long stated, obviously, there's a mix in technologies. We, 4 years in advance, are not always going to be predicting exactly where we're going to be able to develop and what our customers are going to be interested in. And notably, since we laid those expectations out for the first time, a lot did change, including the passage of the IRA, and that had both an impact on engine dynamics for our customers buying wind, which was largely in advance. Speaker 700:46:45The expectations that the incentives would ultimately wind down and in the IRA introduction of the production tax credit for solar, which made solar more attractive than it was even before, as well as a standalone ITC for storage. So that really spurred demand for solar and storage. But if I can kind of take a step back and kind of pile into the question that Steve answered and some of the comments that John made earlier, we are seeing significant demand across the entire U. S. Economy. Speaker 700:47:17That of course includes data centers, technology, AI driven compute demand, but it is also manufacturing, the redomestication of the important industries in the U. S. And it is also oil and gas and chemicals companies looking to get lower cost energy solutions into their mix. That spurs a need for a lot of build. So as we look at our 300 gigawatts of products that are in development and the integrated solutions and solutions that we're designing for our customers, I remain very optimistic about all of the technologies. Speaker 700:47:51In various parts of the country, wind is most economic. In parts of the country, it's going to be solar and storage, etcetera. So I love the portfolio approach. And from a returns perspective, I think we continue to realize very attractive returns for all the technologies, and of course, adjusted for the types of risks that we think we take. So mid teens for solar and above 20% levered returns for wind and storage technologies. Speaker 700:48:20So I think from an investor standpoint, that's a very attractive proposition. Speaker 600:48:26Awesome. Thanks for that, Rebecca. And then you mentioned in the prepared or the last question, 15 percent CAGR for data center demand growth through the end of the decade. I guess as you think about some of these other drivers that you've mentioned of increased power demand in the U. S, How do you think that will drive kind of overall load growth? Speaker 600:48:45Do you have expectations there through the end of the decade? Speaker 700:48:48So we'll have a lot more to say in terms of our expectations and certainly in context of a number of third party views at the investor conference. But I think it's safe to say at this point that we see strong drivers for a long period of time, decades into the future, driving renewables penetration in electricity and electricity penetration into overall U. S. And energy consumption, which sets up terrific dynamics for us to continue to compete and create opportunities to invest capital for our shareholders at very attractive returns. So I love our opportunity set. Speaker 600:49:25Great. Thank you for that color. Thank you. Operator00:49:30The next question comes from Durgesh Chopra with Evercore ISI. Please go ahead. Speaker 800:49:37Good morning. Thank you for giving me time. Maybe just, Rebecca, on the topic of electricity demand growth, one of the questions we consistently get, and I think John ended on this, the 15% data center growth driving it is how quickly can you ramp up? So maybe can you just talk to that? Are there any constraints, whether it's equipment, whether it's sites? Speaker 800:49:59How quickly can the generation side of this, the renewable generation can ramp up? Speaker 700:50:07Yes, Durgesh, I appreciate the question. I think a little bit of context is important. I think all of us, and ourselves included, have really started talking about the significant change in load growth really over the last year, maybe even the last 6 months. And you all very much appreciate that a development business, anything connecting to electrical infrastructure usually talks in terms of years and sometimes a lot of years depending on the market. To get something into place in the ERCOT market is maybe a couple of years and some markets in the Midwest that have had congested queues and some transmission constraints that could be 5 to 7 years. Speaker 700:50:47And obviously, we've been working for a period of time. I think we're the least behind of anybody with our 300 gigawatt portfolio, but some of this will take some time to materialize. I feel very confident in the long term trends. I feel really excited and pleased with our team's preparedness in terms of the development of that pipeline. And I very much think our competitive advantages that John highlighted on scale, experience and technology really position us well in the types of conversations we're having with our customers, creating this long term visibility into demand dynamics. Speaker 700:51:25You guys asked John a question about data centers and how competitive we are with them. They are not looking for projects anymore. They are looking for integrated solutions that solve long term problems for them, and we are a perfect partner for them, with which to work. Speaker 800:51:43That's very helpful, Rebecca. And then maybe just a quick follow-up. I think you made comments around very healthy returns. Are you seeing high returns, higher margins with your data center clients versus your other clients? I mean, several of your peers have highlighted high returns there. Speaker 800:52:01Maybe just comment on that? Speaker 700:52:03I continue to believe we have very attractive returns across the board, consistent with the comments that I've made today as well as the comments we made at our development 101 day and included in our monthly updates for investor materials. So mid teens and solar and above 20% for both wind and storage. Of course, as we talk with customers and we have unique solutions that solve particular problems that we have, We design the solutions to meet those needs and always stay focused at the end of the day on what's the attractive value proposition from an investor standpoint. We remain disciplined around that. So I love the portfolio, I love positioning, and I believe what we ultimately deliver for investors is very attractive. Speaker 800:52:51That is very helpful. Thank you very much. Operator00:52:54The next question comes from Jeremy Tonet with JPMorgan. Please go Speaker 200:53:03ahead. Operator00:53:07Excuse me, Mr. Tournay, your line is open. Is your phone open? Speaker 300:53:11Good morning. Thank you. Speaker 900:53:17Just want to start off on storage originations coming in quite strong and if there's any Speaker 700:53:26Hey, Jeremy, it's Rebecca. I'm going to go for the presumptive close on the answer. Hopefully, it's the question you actually asked. Storage origination is very strong. As Kirk highlighted in some of the prepared remarks and John commented in Q and A, as we think about our customers' need for energy and capacity, it remains a very attractive value proposition to incorporate storage to firm up renewables either co located or separate. Speaker 700:53:55So we're seeing terrific origination from an energy resources perspective. And we've also talked today about the attractiveness of storage at FPL. So I'll hand it off to Armando to give some additional color. Speaker 1000:54:07Thanks, Rebecca. So I would add, if you recall John and Kurt's comments, we filed our 10 year site plan, which we do every year. Our 10 year site plan this year had the same amount of solar that it did last year, which is a lot of solar, 21 gigs over the next 10 years. But we doubled the amount of storage up to 4 gigawatts of storage that we have in our plan. We increasingly see storage as a economical addition in our service area. Speaker 1000:54:41My expectations are that as time goes on that we would likely add more storage to our plans going forward because it is that attractive in the overall economics, especially as we add solar, which again continues to be the best proposition from a cost standpoint for our customers. Speaker 900:55:07Thank you for that. And just going back to the Renewable Development Day, or for people that weren't able to make any particular points want to highlight? Speaker 700:55:23Jeremy, you broke up a little bit. So I'm going to again guess a little bit on what the question was. But I'm assuming it was what were some of the key takeaways from the Development 101 Day. And I hope it was a worthwhile time for our investors. We certainly were so proud of our team and talking about what it is that we believe differentiates us as we talk to our customers. Speaker 700:55:46And it really was around that scale experience and technology, not just individually how all of those are important, but also how they interact with one another. So as John highlighted, the scale advantages comes the ability to deploy technologies that are unique. And with experience, we actually are able to invest in capturing that data that we get from scale and put it in technologies to actually get some really cool insights. So I think the key takeaway from my perspective is significant load growth, certainly some opportunities to put deploy that scale experience at technology to deploy unique and compelling solutions to our customers. So I love our growth prospects. Speaker 700:56:29I love the position we have just as John highlighted in his comments and look forward to telling you more at the Investor Conference in June. Speaker 900:56:38Great. Thank you very much. Operator00:56:42This concludes our question and answer session and the NextEra Energy and NextEra Energy Partners LP Earnings Conference Call. Thank you for attending today's presentation. You may now disconnect.Read moreRemove AdsPowered by