The biggest Chinese companies are far out in front of their US and European peers when it comes to generating income from solar, wind, nuclear and other types of renewable energy.
The region has more than 680 companies that draw more than half their revenue from clean energy, which includes renewable and nuclear power, electrified transport, biofuels, hydrogen and carbon capture, BNEF estimates. That compares with closer to 410 companies in the US and roughly 430 in Europe, the Middle East and Africa combined.

With corporations struggling to make the transition to net-zero emissions, analysts at BNEF examined more than 8,000 companies to determine how much of their revenue is attributable to clean energy.
“Shifting business models toward greener activities is about more than being virtuous for the sake of the planet,” says BNEF’s Michael Daly. “There’s a huge financial opportunity for companies that help drive the energy transition.”
The opacity of company reports makes uncovering clean energy exposures a major challenge, Daly says. For instance, most large oil and gas companies do not break out clean-energy revenue as a stand-alone category. And some, such as fossil fuel giants ExxonMobil and Marathon Petroleum, provide no information whatsoever about any proceeds from clean energy activities.
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Electricitie de France SA generated almost 70 per cent of its revenue last year from nuclear power, with additional income from hydro, wind and solar sources, according to BNEF. Italy’s Enel has a more balanced set of clean power generation revenue and ranks just behind EDF and Sweden’s Vattenfall among the world’s largest utilities with the highest clean-energy exposure.
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