
As Europe pushes towards its €1.5 trillion renewables target, companies like Ikea look for green power opportunities today
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Companies like Ikea and Stegra illustrate how European businesses are increasingly viewing the transition as an opportunity in itself, rather than simply waiting for better times to emerge.
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8 min read
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investment
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August 5, 2025
03:00 PM
Fortune
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Economy·Ingka GroupAs Europe pushes towards its €1.5 trillion renewables target, companies Ikea look for green power opportunities today By Andrew SaundersBy Andrew Saunders Jesper Brodin, CEO of Ingka (the largest Ikea franchisee, responsible for 90% of group sales).Or Berg/picture alliance via Getty ImagesSwedish megabrand Ikea’s affordable self-assembly furniture has made Scandi style the go-to look for s, hotels and Airbnbs all over Europe
More than 30 million of its ubiquitous Poang armchairs, for example—curious-but-memorable names also being an Ikea speciality)—have been sold since launch in 1977, making it one of the most furniture ducts ever
But the company has another, less well-known claim to fame
Since 2009 it has invested over €4.2 billion ($4.9 billion) in renewable energy, which now vides 75% of the electricity used by the to make, transport and retail all that furniture. “Today, it turns out that we are also a mid-sized utility company, although to be honest that was not part of the strategy,” deadpans Jesper Brodin, CEO of Ingka (the largest Ikea franchisee, responsible for 90% of group sales)
It’s only half a joke: if their output was sold on the power market, the 49 wind farms and 26 solar parks owned by Ingka do duce enough low carbon electricity to meet the needs of 1.47 million EU households
The investment has certainly paid off in carbon terms
The firm’s CO2 emissions—scope 1,2 and 3—are down 30% since the Paris Agreement of 2015, while sales have grown by 24% over the same period
Yet what started out as a desire to do the right thing for the planet and the brand (68% of Ikea customers think that climate change is the most serious global challenge, says Brodin) has morphed into an unexpected source of competitive advantage. $4.9 billionIkea’s investment in renewable energy since 2009 “When we set out to invest, we were not sure that it would be smart from an economic point of view
But our energy bills are down 27% [from 2015] so we have d a lot of money
Over a three-to-five-year period, renewables come out at half the price [of fossil fuel generated power]
People think that renewable energy will come at a financial premium, but actually it’s the opposite.” After the Russian invasion of Ukraine caused a two-year spike in wholesale gas prices, a similar change of emphasis has occurred in Brussels
The EU Commission’s plan for its carbon economy—the Clean Industrial Deal, announced in February—has dropped previous appeals to the collective consciences of leaders to help the planet, in favor of focusing on the competitiveness advantages of further adopting renewable power across the continent
Commission president Ursula von der Leyen has said that the deal will “cut the ties that still hold our companies back, and make a case for Europe”
Alongside reforms to electricity and gas designed to cut energy costs, the Clean Industrial Deal aims to mobilize €100 billion of EU funding to support low-carbon manufacturing, particularly in hard-to-abate industries metals, chemicals and cement that rely on hydrocarbons for their highly energy-intensive cesses
The Commission predicts the policy gram will create over 500,000 new jobs, and ample opportunities for European es looking to carve a competitive, low-carbon niche
Green steel start-up Stegra is one such company
It has raised a total of €6.5 billion (including a €250 million grant from the EU innovation fund) to build a plant at Boden in the north of Sweden which will use 100% renewable energy to duce 5 million tonnes of grown ‘green’ steel per annum by 2030, with a carbon foot 95% smaller than a traditional ‘brown’ steel plant
Stegra’s cess uses renewable power to generate hydrogen, which is then used not as a fuel but as a chemical reagent. duction will begin at a lower level in 2026, and despite a 25%-30% price premium over brown steel, it is already ving : the firm has forward-sold around 1.25 million tonnes—half of its initial duction target—to customers eager to get in on the green steel ground floor. “Our customers are planning ahead, they see that brown steel will eventually be more expensive than green steel once the full cost of carbon is included
They are not buying it for branding or marketing purposes, it’s pure economics,” says Henrik Henriksson, Stegra’s CEO
High costs, big barriers If von der Leyen’s vision of secure, green growth is to be realized at scale for more companies, Europe needs to ramp up the transition to renewables significantly, at the same time as bringing down costs
By the end of 2023, Europe (excluding Russia) had 786 gigawatts of installed renewable generation capacity, according to the International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA)
That’s an increase of 79% since 2014, and the pace has continued since, with a record increase of 65.6 gigawatts in the EU alone last year and another record predicted this year
However, it still leaves a long way to go to reach the EU’s ambitious targets of 69% of electricity consumption and 42.5% of total energy coming from renewables by 2030
According to the European Commission’s 2022 REPowerEU plan to end reliance on Russian fossil fuels, the EU would need to nearly double its capacity to 1,236 gigawatts to achieve this goal
Some estimates suggest this will cost around €1.5 trillion
Then there’s the need to Europe’s grids, not just to handle the greater peak loads from these investments, but also to cover the distance between the best sites for renewable generation (solar in southern Europe, wind in coastal western Europe) and distant urban centers
So far, network investment has considerably lagged investments in renewables themselves. “Because of the variability of wind [and solar], there is an urgent need for more interconnectors, and more investment in grids,” says Christophe Zipf, spokesperson for WindEurope, the trade body for the EU wind energy industry
One such mooted ject is the North Sea Renewables Grid, a £20bn ject to link 400 wind turbines in the North Sea, to facilitate the exchange of wind power between countries on both sides of the water. “Where there are such clusters it makes sense to link them to more than one country—the U.K., Denmark and Belgium for example,” Zipf says
But where will the money come from? Given the right regulatory environment, there is capital ready to move, says Francecso Starace, partner at EQT, the world’s third largest private equity investor, which has invested €17 billion in renewables in Europe over the past 15 years
There is already quite an appetite for investment in the grid and distribution networks
The networks need to be restructured for the modern world, not for the world of 50 years ago when they were built. “Regulators have a major role to play, but they need to understand that more money needs to be invested into the networks
Network operators need regulation that incentivizes investment rather than discouraging them from doing that, which has been the case for many years,” says Starace, a former CEO of Enel
In practice, -investment regulation can mean several things: imvements in investor returns, relaxation of planning restrictions and greater central coordination of national transmission upgrade schemes
Even if all that happens, what of the days when the sun isn’t shining and the wind isn’t blowing? Renewables may be grown, but their output is inherently unpredictable. “Network operators need regulation that incentivizes investment rather than discouraging them from doing that, which has been the case for many years”Starace, former CEO of Enel As a result, Starace believes the next big thing will be grid-scale battery storage. “We believe batteries will be the next source of explosive growth
Battery storage can deal with fluctuations, and batteries are becoming pervasively competitive and a compelling investment.” Battery infrastructure on this scale would also require substantial capital, of course, altogether making the idea of cheaper power by 2030 seem rather less ly: whether through bills or taxes, someone’s got to pay
But relying on fickle global gas no longer seems an option once your main supplier turns into an adversary, and in the long term the economic logic is there: once the infrastructure is built, the marginal unit cost of renewable power is far lower
In the meantime, as companies Ikea and Stegra are showing, European es are increasingly looking for opportunities from the transition itself, rather than just waiting for the light at the end of the tunnel
Europe lags the U.S. and China in key growth sectors due to costly energy and stalled market reforms
This article series explores how nology, regulation, and innovation can revive its competitiveness.
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