Renewable energy
producer Juhl Wind filed to terminate registration of its common stock and
cease filing financial reports with the Securities and Exchange Commission in
September 2015, but the company was not withdrawing from the wind energy industry. Instead Juhl expanded. Now called Juhl Energy (JUHL: OTC/PNK), the company’s corporate
website boasts of its corporate headquarters in Minnesota powered exclusively
by wind and solar energy. The company
also claims the successful development of over 350 megawatts of wind power
generation capacity at 25 different wind projects. Additionally, the company has dipped its corporate
toe into biomass energy and natural gas systems.
After keeping a
fairly low profile over the last two years, Juhl is making headlines again. The
company is developing a mixed-source project in Red Lake Falls, Minnesota that
is expected to be the first commercial solar-wind power generation source in the
U.S. When construction is complete in
August 2017, there will be two 2.3 megawatt wind turbines and 1.0 megawatt
solar conversion capacity.
Juhl is making
small, community-based energy development like the Red Lake Falls project the
focus of its business strategy. The
company recently sold several of its renewable energy assets to ConEdison
Development, including three operating wind projects in Minnesota and Iowa with
a total of 36 megawatts generating capacity and additional interests in various
wind power projects with a total of 500 megawatts capacity.
Going forward
Juhl plans to focus on renewable energy projects under 20 megawatts. The company’s standard design for
mixed-source power generation from wind and solar is expected to be a key
offering. The company sees demand for
smaller projects in the 5 megawatt size from rural communities, small
municipalities, industrial complexes and commercial campuses.
At the time of
the asset sales, management expressed optimism about the ability of the company
to grow with this new, more focused strategy, as proceeds of the asset sales could
be used to pay down long-term debt. However,
no details have been made public. Investors
are left to guess about Juhl’s balance sheet.
The company has not filed financial statements for two years. The last balance sheet filed in August 2015,
indicated Juhl held $1.6 million in cash and had $15.9 million in long-term and
non-recourse debt.
Juhl is not
entirely cut off from investors. Besides
entertaining questions from the public, the company accepts investments in
preferred stock in a subsidiary called Juhl Renewable Assets. The preferred stock gives investors a stake
in Juhl’s solar and wind power projects.
Neither the author of the Small Cap Strategist web
log, Crystal Equity Research nor its affiliates have a beneficial interest in
the companies mentioned herein.
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