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EnBW Energie Baden-Württemberg AG, or simply EnBW, is a publicly traded company headquartered in , .


History

Foundation and development
EnBW came into existence on 1 January 1997 as a result of the merger between two energy companies from Baden-Württemberg, Badenwerk AG and Energie-Versorgung AG (EVS). Subsequently, on 1 October 2003, EnBW further merged with Neckarwerke Stuttgart AG.
(2025). 9783836087124, Edition Sigma.


Strategic reorientation and expansion of renewable energy activities
In March 2012, Frank Mastiaux was appointed as the new CEO of EnBW. At the end of 2012, in response to the nuclear power phase-out and the energy transition, Mastiaux announced a strategic reorientation. The proportion of sources in EnBW's was to increase from 12% to 40% by 2020. The figure of 40.1% was reached in 2021. Much of this was to be achieved by expanding wind power: with 1,016 onshore and 975 MW offshore, EnBW is now one of the leading developers and operators in Germany.

Between 2020 and 2025, the company plans to invest over €5 billion in the further expansion of renewable energy generation and aims to operate onshore and offshore wind farms with a total capacity of at least 4,000 MW. EnBW's first offshore wind farm – EnBW Baltic 1, comprising 21 in the – went into operation in 2011. This was followed in early summer 2015 by the 80-turbine EnBW Baltic 2 offshore wind farm, a stake in which had already been sold to investment group for €720 million in January 2015. In early 2020, the EnBW Hohe See and Albatros wind farms with a total of 87 turbines and 609 MW capacity went into operation in the . In 2017, EnBW won bidding for the right to construct its third North Sea wind farm, the 900 MW EnBW He Dreiht, which is unsubsidised and is scheduled for completion in 2025. In January 2019, EnBW acquired seven wind farms in with a total of 51 turbines and an installed capacity of 105 MW.

EnBW also plans to expand its grids business and make various divestments. An important growth market is , where EnBW's focus is on and wind farms.

In 2017, EnBW began expanding its , and distributed energy generation activities:

In electric mobility, EnBW has collaborated since March 2017 with Tank & Rast, an operator of along the German network, to expand the provision of for electric vehicles. EnBW provides the EnBW mobility+ app, which combines a charging point locator with payment options and covers Germany, , , , and the . According to an independent study by P3, Cirrantic and Theon Data, EnBW has the largest charging network spanning Germany, Austria and Switzerland. In 2020, the company extended its market leadership in fast charging to Austria by entering into a joint venture with SMATRICS called SMATRICS EnBW. In April 2021, EnBW announced plans to open Europe's biggest public fast charging park for electric vehicles by the end of the year.

In photovoltaics and distributed energy generation, EnBW aims to expand photovoltaic generating capacity to 1,200 MWp by 2025, mainly in Germany but also in selected markets elsewhere. In this connection, EnBW is building Germany's largest unsubsidised solar farm with an area of 164 hectares in and in March 2018 acquired Senec, a -based manufacturer of home solar battery storage systems.

In March 2023, EnBW announced that it intends to end coal usage by 2028.

In August 2023, it was announced EnBW had acquired a 10% equity stake in a renewable ammonia production plant developed by company Skipavika Green Ammonia (SkiGA).


Internationalisation of renewable energy activities
The EnBW 2025 Strategy includes selective internationalisation of the company's renewable energy activities. EnBW has a presence in through its subsidiary Connected Wind Services and in Sweden in the form of EnBW Sverige. In June 2019, EnBW completed the acquisition of Valeco, France. The company has a renewable energy joint venture in Turkey in partnership with . EnBW has also opened offices of its own in Taiwan and the United States in order to bid in offshore wind auctions. Early in 2021, EnBW and BP jointly won an auction for rights to develop offshore wind farms in two adjacent areas of the .


Transmission grid
In 2023, EnBW sold around a quarter of its high-voltage transmission grid to a savings banks-led consortium for around 1 billion euros ($1.1 billion).Christoph Steitz and Linda Pasquini (26 May 2023), EnBW sells minority stake in TransnetBW for $1.1 billion  . Also in 2023, state-owned acquired a 24.95% minority stake in TransnetBW, firming up its grip on critical energy infrastructure in a bid to speed up the country's energy transition.[14]  .


Sports sponsorship
EnBW was the main sponsor of football clubs and for several years until 2010 and continues to sponsor both clubs at a lesser level.


Structure

Shareholders
The two principal shareholders of EnBW are NECKARPRI-Beteiligungsgesellschaft mbH (itself fully owned by the state of Baden-Württemberg) and Oberschwäbische Elektrizitätswerke (OEW, owned by local municipalities), each of which hold a 46.75% ownership interest.


Board of Management
The Board of Management () of the EnBW holding company consists of Andreas Schell (Chief Executive Officer since 15 November 2022), Colette Rückert-Hennen (Chief Human Resources Officer), Thomas Kusterer (Chief Financial Officer), Dirk Gusewill (Chief Operating Officer Critical Infrastructure) and Georg Stamatelopoulos (Chief Operating Officer Generation).


Figures
EnBW has around 5.5 million customers and is the third-largest energy company in Germany. With a workforce of 26,980, EnBW generated revenue of €56,0 billion in 2022.


Carbon intensity
Year !Generation portfolio electrical output in MW !CO2 Intensity in g/kWh


Facilities

Nuclear power plants
  • Neckarwestheim Nuclear Power Plant (decommissioned)
  • Obrigheim Nuclear Power Plant (decommissioned)
  • Philippsburg Nuclear Power Plant (decommissioned)


Conventional power plants
Source:
  • Altbach coal power plant
  • Heilbronn coal power plant
  • Marbach am Neckar oil power plant
  • coal power plant
  • -Gaisburg gas power plant
  • Stuttgart-Münster steam power plant (biofuels and coal)
  • Rheinhafen-Dampfkraftwerk Karlsruhe coal and gas turbine plant


Renewable energy sources: hydropower
Source:


Renewable energy sources: offshore wind farms
Source:
  • EnBW Baltic 1 Offshore Wind Farm (Baltic Sea, 16 kilometres north of the Darss-Zingst peninsula)
  • EnBW Baltic 2 (Baltic Sea, 32 kilometres north of the island of Rügen)
  • EnBW Hohe See and Albatros (North Sea; Hohe See approximately 95 kilometres north of the island of and 100 kilometres northwest of ; Albatros 105 kilometres from each coast)


Renewable energy sources: onshore wind farms
Source:

Wind farms and wind power projects in Baden-Württemberg:

  • Aalen-Waldhausen
  • Ahaberg
  • Bad Wildbad
  • Burgholz
  • Bühlertann
  • Dünsbach
  • Fichtenau
  • Goldboden-Winterbach
  • Grömbach
  • Hasel
  • Häusern
  • Königsbronn
  • Kupferzell-Goggenbach
  • Langenburg
  • Oppenau/Lautenbach
  • Rosenberg Süd
  • Rot am See-Hausen am Bach
  • Tautschbuch
  • Veringenstadt

Wind farms in other German states:

  • Auf der weißen Trisch ()
  • Bad Nauheim ()
  • Buchholz III ()
  • Derental (Lower Saxony)
  • Eisenbachhöhen (Rhineland-Palatinate)
  • Eppenrod (Rhineland-Palatinate)
  • Freckenfeld (Rhineland-Palatinate)
  • Hüttersdorf (Saarland)
  • Kahlberg (Hesse)
  • Kannawurf ()
  • Lauenförde (Lower Saxony)
  • Primsbogen (Saarland)
  • Reinstädt (Thuringia)
  • Schalksmühle (North Rhine-Westphalia)
  • Schulenburg III (Lower Saxony)
  • Schwienau III (Lower Saxony)
  • Silberberg (Hesse)
  • Steinheim (North Rhine-Westphalia)
  • Webenheim (Saarland)
  • Vierherrenwald (Rhineland-Palatinate)

Wind farms in other countries:

  • Råmmarehemmet (Sweden)
  • EnBW also has stakes in onshore wind farms in France through its subsidiary


Renewable energy sources: solar power
Source:

Solar farms in operation:

  • Aitrach (1.5 MW)
  • Berghülen (2.7 MW)
  • Birkenfeld (5.8 MW)
  • Eggesin (10 MW)
  • Ingoldingen (4.3 MW)
  • Inzigkofen (7.5 MW)
  • Kenzingen (2.6 MW)
  • Krautheim (0.5 MW)
  • Leibertingen (2.1 MW)
  • Leibertingen II (5 MW)
  • Leutkirch (5 MW)
  • Leutkirch II (2.9 MW)
  • Leutkirch III (0.75 MW)
  • Lindendorf (6.9 MW)
  • Löffingen (2.7 MW)
  • March-Neuershausen (0.9 MW)
  • Müssentin (9.3 MW)
  • Ochsenberg/Königsbronn (10 MW)
  • Torgau (4.9 MW)
  • Tuningen (4.5 MW)
  • Ulm-Eggingen (6.5 MW)
  • Zwiefaltendorf (5.2 MW)

Solar farms in development:

  • Langenenslingen-Wilflingen
  • Maßbach
  • Sophienhof
  • Ulrichshof
  • Weesow-Willmersdorf
  • Welgesheim


See also


External links

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