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Star Peak Energy Transition Corp

Star Peak Energy Transition Corp (STPK)

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Closed December 25 4:00PM
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Double-Trouble Double-Trouble 4 years ago
Think STEP would be able to step into the light during this hack!
Unreal
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Porterhouse10 Porterhouse10 4 years ago
Nice, thx
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realfast95 realfast95 4 years ago
Stem Completes Business Combination with Star Peak Energy Transition Corp.

April 28, 2021 16:38 ET | Source: Stem, Inc.

...

Creates first publicly traded pure-play smart energy storage company

Results in over $600 million of gross cash proceeds to Stem

Stem’s common stock to begin trading on the NYSE under symbol “STEM” on April 29, 2021
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Porterhouse10 Porterhouse10 4 years ago
Steve Grasso gives the nod to $STPK on Final trade, these SPACs are down down
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realfast95 realfast95 4 years ago
article that came out yesterday morning

Star Peak Energy Transition Stock Is a Too-Risky Clean Energy Play to Buy Now

Stem's profitability concerns and other operational risks limit the attractiveness of STPK stock at this time
By Muslim Farooque Apr 26, 2021, 6:00 am EDT

lank-check company Star Peak Energy Transition (NYSE:STPK) stock is down roughly 15% this month.
A concept photo of different energy storage systems.
Source: Shutterstock

The company had posted some impressive gains after announcing its merger with battery technology specialist Stem. However, STPK stock has lost some ground in the past few months amidst a lack of investor interest in growth-dependent tech securities.

Moreover, with a 57.4% increase in the accumulated deficit for Stem, investors should employ the wait-and-see approach with STPK stock.

You have to admire Stem’s goal here, though. It plans to become the first publicly traded smart energy storage pure-play. The integrated energy storage market is expected to grow to $1.2 trillion within the next 30 years.

Therefore, it has a massive addressable market which could result in a premium value for the stock. The euphoria around the merger led to a 167% growth in SPTK stock in the past six months.

However, a few question marks, especially regarding its path to profitability, limit its attractiveness.
Earnings Results

Stem recently released its financial results for 2020, ahead of its merger with Star Peak Energy Transition. Revenues increased by a whopping 69.6% to $36.3 million. However, the fourfold increase in revenues was unable to lead the company to profitability.

There was a 57.4% increase in its accumulated deficit to roughly $408 million. Operational expenses have shot up roughly 26.8%. The company has admitted that profitability appears to be way off at this time.

The company had guided that it expects revenues to be four times greater in 2021 than in 2020. It re-affirmed its guidance in its earnings report in March. Moreover, analysts forecast that its revenues could increase at an incredible 96% to $944 million by fiscal 2025.

A core element of Stem’s future potential depends on its AI-driven energy solution, named Athena. The platform is effectively used for demand and supply forecasting and battery optimization. With Athena being a recurring SaaS model, it has a strong gross margin profile that will ease its path to profitability.

Despite the rampant growth in revenues, the company has proven to be ineffective in managing its costs. Its net loss continues to grow at a massive rate which will continue to widen its bear case.
Looking Forward for Star Peak Energy Transition

Stem expects to continue incurring losses through 2022. It has a tall order ahead of it is turning a profit which is contingent on several factors. Some of these factors include growth in its sales volume, ability to procure ESS equipment cost-effectiveness, and attracting new customers for its high margin offerings.

Furthermore, a lot of its success will depend upon the adoption of renewable energy and the cost reductions in battery storage. As far as adoption rates are concerned, market analysts are certain of the massive potential of the smart energy storage industry.

However, production can be a major issue, mainly because Stem depends on various suppliers and could be affected by disruptions, outages and other aspects.

Stem has also raised concerns about its internal control mechanism over its financial reporting. It states its limited resources, and the complexity of transactions had created material weaknesses in its internal controls.

This raises doubts about the veracity of its financials ahead of its merger.
Bottom Line on STPK Stock

Star Peak Energy Transition will be merging with Stem and unlock a lot of value for the investors of the combined entity. Though it has momentum behind it, several risks complicate its bull case.

Profitability is perhaps the biggest thorn on its side, and it needs to work on its path to profitability seriously. Moreover, it needs to sort out its internal controls before investors lose their faith in its financials.

Hence, it’s best to wait and see how STPK stock progresses in the coming months before thinking about investing in it at this time.

https://investorplace.com/2021/04/stpk-stock-is-a-highly-risky-clean-energy-play/
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realfast95 realfast95 4 years ago
Virtual meeting date: Tuesday, April 27, 2021
Virtual meeting time: 11:00 a.m. Eastern Time (EDT)
Virtual meeting link (this page): www.cstproxy.com/starpeakcorp/2021
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1hot toddy 1hot toddy 4 years ago
STPK BUYING BACK 20K SHARES. ANYONE KNOW WHOW MUCH???????????????4
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Porterhouse10 Porterhouse10 4 years ago
Ouchie Boo Boo
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realfast95 realfast95 4 years ago
that was fast


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Porterhouse10 Porterhouse10 4 years ago
Ruhh rohhh
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realfast95 realfast95 4 years ago
STPK is aware of one complaint that has been filed on behalf of a purported stockholder of the Company relating to the Merger: Sean Smith v. Star Peak Energy Transition Corp., et al., in the Supreme Court of the State of New York, County of New York, No. 650344/2021. The complaint alleges that the Proxy Statement contains materially misleading and incomplete information regarding the Merger. The Company has received a draft complaint raising similar allegations from another purported stockholder of the Company.



While STPK believes that the disclosures set forth in the Proxy Statement comply fully with applicable law, in order to resolve the shareholders’ disclosure claims so as to avoid nuisance, cost and distraction, and to preclude any efforts to delay the closing of the Merger, STPK has determined to voluntarily supplement the Proxy Statement with the supplemental disclosures set forth below (the “Supplemental Disclosures”). Nothing in the Supplemental Disclosures shall be deemed an admission of the legal necessity or materiality under applicable laws of any of the disclosures set forth herein. To the contrary, STPK specifically denies all allegations that any additional disclosure was or is required. STPK believes the shareholders’ claims are without merit.



The Supplemental Disclosures will not affect the merger consideration to be paid to STPK’s stockholders in connection with the Merger or the timing of STPK’s virtual special meeting of stockholders scheduled to be held online via live webcast on April 27, 2021 at 11 a.m., Eastern Time, at https://www.cstproxy.com/starpeakcorp/2021 (the “Special Meeting”). The board of directors continues to recommend that you vote “FOR” the proposals being considered at the Special Meeting.



Supplemental Disclosures to Proxy Statement



The following information should be read in conjunction with the Proxy Statement. All page references in the information below are to pages in the Proxy Statement, and capitalized terms used in this Current Report on Form 8-K shall have the meanings set forth in the Proxy Statement, unless otherwise defined herein. Underlined text shows text being added to a referenced disclosure in the Proxy Statement.



The Proxy Statement is hereby amended as follows:



Adding the following paragraph before the first full paragraph on page 163:



Between August 20, 2020, the date of STPK’s IPO, and September 28, 2020, STPK considered over 89 potential targets, including both privately held companies and assets or divisions owned by publicly traded companies. Of those potential targets, STPK entered into non-disclosure agreements with 11 entities. STPK primarily focused its search on businesses that, in STPK’s view, are best in class within the clean energy industry and the broader energy transition space. STPK prioritized companies that target large addressable markets with long-term growth potential and whose products and technologies have low risk of obsolescence. STPK also focused on companies that could serve as platforms for both organic and acquisitive growth and were led by an experienced management team with a proven track record and complementary capabilities. Throughout this process, STPK leveraged the investing, industry and transaction experience of Sponsor, STPK’s management and the STPK Board to screen, prioritize and diligence potential acquisition candidates. A number of the potential targets that STPK evaluated did not, in STPK’s opinion, meet enough of the criteria it sought in its business combination partner. Following this preliminary evaluation of these 11 companies, STPK determined to focus its resources and efforts in the near-term on Stem, which STPK believed, based on this preliminary evaluation and the experience of its officers and directors, was the most suitable for a business combination.
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realfast95 realfast95 4 years ago
magnet to 22.52 it seems

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Porterhouse10 Porterhouse10 4 years ago
Long play, but hear ya, gotta a bundle tied up in this @$29.xx avg.
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Glider549 Glider549 4 years ago
Looks like nobody cared.
This stock is killing me.
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realfast95 realfast95 4 years ago

Stem, Inc. Successfully Transitions 345MWh Southern California Energy Storage Portfolio to its Athena™ Software
April 14 2021 - 06:30AM
GlobeNewswire Inc.

Stem, Inc. (“Stem” or the “Company”), a global leader in artificial intelligence (AI)-driven clean energy storage services, today announced it has completed six months of successful operation of the 345MWh energy storage portfolio owned by Electrodes Holdings LLC (“Electrodes”) which last year transferred portfolio control to Stem’s Athena™ smart energy software. Customers in the 86-site portfolio are now realizing more than 30% greater monthly energy savings on average compared to the previous software provider.

Within two months of being awarded the exclusive contract by Electrodes, Stem seamlessly onboarded to Athena management this portfolio that serves 25 large commercial and municipal customers in the Los Angeles area. The customers at these sites – ranging from office buildings, water treatment plants, university campuses, local government buildings, food processing plants, medical facilities, and retail superstores –now benefit from Athena’s intelligence and real-time decision-making to optimize energy storage systems and energy use. Stem has also delivered local controllable capacity to a Southern California investor-owned utility where the portfolio is based.

“This seamless portfolio transition is further proof of Stem's energy storage leadership and the effectiveness of our best-in-class Athena™ technology in delivering superior results for customers,” said Stem CEO John Carrington. “Our team’s technical and operational expertise allowed for a full, unimpeded, and highly-efficient changeover of these complex systems, ensuring maximum uptime for the customers while increasing returns for the system owner.”

“The more than 30% increase in savings performance we have achieved so far is a testament to Stem’s superior technology, leading customer service, and capabilities of our expert Programs team,” said Stem VP of Program Operations Julie Steury. “The efficient data transfer of an extensive energy storage portfolio along with hardware reconfigurations of 86 sites furthers our leading position in the critical California market and reflects the ongoing efforts of our data operations to successfully prioritize data integrity and transparency.”
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realfast95 realfast95 4 years ago
Spanked SPAC

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Glider549 Glider549 4 years ago
So much for the fireside chat.
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Porterhouse10 Porterhouse10 4 years ago
Tankin
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realfast95 realfast95 4 years ago

Star Peak Energy Transition Corp. and Stem, Inc. to Host Fireside Chat Today with IPO Edge to Discuss Business Combination
April 12 2021 - 07:30AM
GlobeNewswire Inc.

Star Peak Energy Transition Corp. (NYSE: STPK), a publicly traded special purpose acquisition company (“Star Peak”), and Stem, Inc., a global leader in artificial intelligence (AI)-driven clean energy storage systems (“Stem”), announced that the companies will host a fireside chat with IPO Edge today, Monday, April 12 at 2pm EDT, to discuss their pending business combination. The live event will feature Michael Morgan, Chairman of Star Peak and John Carrington, CEO of Stem. IPO Edge Editor-in-Chief John Jannarone will moderate the video session, which will last approximately 45 minutes and include a Q&A with the audience.

To register, CLICK HERE

To view IPO Edge’s announcement about today’s fireside chat, CLICK HERE

“We are excited to approach the closing of our business combination with Stem and to engage with our shareholders during today’s fireside chat, in this important time for Star Peak and Stem,” said Morgan. “We look forward to discussing Stem’s market leadership and growth opportunity, the voting process, and to answering questions from investors about the transaction.”

Morgan and Carrington will discuss:

An overview of the merger and investment highlights
The opportunity to use smart batteries as the power grid shifts to renewable sources
The strong reception to the deal as measured in various ways
The recent evolution of the SPAC market and involvement of more individual investors
Why it is important for all shareholders to vote, regardless of how much stock they own
How investors vote shares through their brokers

The Special Meeting to approve the pending business combination is scheduled for Tuesday, April 27, 2021, at 11:00 a.m. ET. The Special Meeting will be completely virtual and conducted via live webcast. Holders of Star Peak’s shares of Common Stock at the close of business on the record date of March 4, 2021 are entitled to notice of the virtual Special Meeting and should vote before 11:59 p.m. ET on April 26, 2021.

If the proposals at the Special Meeting are approved, the parties anticipate that the business combination will close shortly thereafter, subject to the satisfaction or waiver (as applicable) of all other closing conditions.

It remains important that all shareholders who owned shares as of March 4 – even if they have since sold – vote by the April 26 deadline to ensure the deal proceeds in a timely manner. For additional information regarding voting your shares see https://stpk.starpeakcorp.com/vote/
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realfast95 realfast95 4 years ago
For short term traders. This could dip at 8am if no news on Monday.
Perhaps recover through 2pm. Then trade off significantly if now news in the meeting. Most news has to be released before the market opens or after it closes.
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realfast95 realfast95 4 years ago
IPO Edge to Host Fireside Chat with Star Peak Chairman and Stem CEO on April 12 to Discuss Merger

https://www.yahoo.com/lifestyle/ipo-edge-host-fireside-chat-120442308.html

IPO Edge will host a fireside chat with Star Peak Energy Transition Corp. (NYSE: STPK) and Stem, Inc. on Monday, April 12 at 2pm EDT to discuss their pending merger. The live event will feature Michael Morgan, Chairman of Star Peak and John Carrington, CEO of Stem. IPO Edge Editor-in-Chief John Jannarone will moderate the video session, which will last approximately 45 minutes and include a Q&A with the audience.
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Porterhouse10 Porterhouse10 4 years ago
Finally went green here, sheesh, good turn here hope it continues
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Porterhouse10 Porterhouse10 4 years ago
Boom!
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ClayTrader ClayTrader 4 years ago
* * $STPK Video Chart 04-08-2021 * *

Link to Video - click here to watch the technical chart video

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realfast95 realfast95 4 years ago
"A key provision would make not-for-profit #electricco-ops eligible for the first time for direct-pay #ITC and production tax credits for #cleanenergy generation and #storage projects." - http://Cooperative.com https://cooperative.com/news/Pages/President-Biden-Infrastructure-Plan-What-Electric-Co-ops-Need-to-Know.aspx #energystorage #batterystorage #energypolicy

https://twitter.com/stempowered/status/1380250002870595586

https://www.cooperative.com/news/Pages/President-Biden-Infrastructure-Plan-What-Electric-Co-ops-Need-to-Know.aspx

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Porterhouse10 Porterhouse10 4 years ago
Finally
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Jlane3965 Jlane3965 4 years ago
r/SPACs - $STPK $TSLA New York speculation
Recently It was announced that Tesla power walls will be used in New York’s first virtual power plant

(For those who don’t know what a virtual power plant is, basically it’s the future of how our energy grid will run, having batteries on every home/commercial building buying/selling energy to each other instead of one huge power plant powering a whole region this is a VPP

Tesla power walls will be used in New York’s first small VPP

https://www.google.ca/amp/s/electrek.co/2021/04/06/tesla-powerwall-power-new-virtual-power-plant-new-york/amp/

As we all know, Stem Inc has the software for virtual power plants and has put there software on Tesla batteries several times, possible new deal?? It gets better

Stem inc also posted several new job applications for New York (they only started posting recently, never have I seen a new job opening before this month, in New York )

Several jobs including “Account executive” “Developer team” etc

Also remember the Texas project they have yet to announce? same thing almost with Stem Inc.

What a fishy coincidence /r/SPACs/comments/m1ip6n/the_electrification_of_grid_is_coming_now_this_is/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=ios_app&utm_name=iossmf

Thoughts ?

Read More JMO..
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realfast95 realfast95 4 years ago
some rumors about a partnership. haven't seen truth

options April 16th 30.0 Call 1.40 1.45 1.40 1.00 9,544 6,288
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Spartan Spartan 4 years ago
Is your hope alive today?
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realfast95 realfast95 4 years ago
What Biden’s American Jobs Plan Means for Energy Storage
By John Carrington, Stem CEO | April 1, 2021

https://www.stem.com/what-bidens-american-jobs-plan-means-for-energy-storage/

President Biden’s American Jobs Plan, unveiled yesterday, contains the most ambitious infrastructure investment program any U.S. president has put forward in decades. The proposed $100 billion investment to transform our electricity grid is significant and will provide more jobs, decarbonize of the grid, drive renewables expansion, and enable grid stability.

While it is too soon to know how portions of the plan might be implemented, its ideas and language offer a roadmap of the administration’s priorities for advancing clean energy and energy storage as a means of creating jobs, strengthening American competitiveness, and achieving 100% carbon-free electricity. In this blog, I will review some of the plan’s key elements and explain what they could mean for energy storage.

Significantly Extended Federal Support for Clean Energy and Storage

One of the plan’s more striking aspects is its proposal to extend clean energy tax credits for 10 years, which would offer valuable stability and predictability to clean energy companies, their employees and customers. The on-again, off-again production tax credit has frustrated wind developers for years and constrains project finance. The plan’s actual language is:

President Biden is proposing a ten-year extension and phase down of an expanded direct-pay investment tax credit and production tax credit for clean energy generation and storage.

“Direct-pay” is just what it sounds like: an entity receives a direct, immediate payment rather than a (potentially more complicated, longer-term) tax credit. Popular with developers, direct-pay accelerates and facilitates capital flow, helping more projects to get financed sooner. Extending direct-pay for 10 years would be an important catalyst for clean energy project development.

Implications of an ITC for Energy Storage

You will note the language above references tax credits for “clean energy generation and storage.” There’s ambiguity here, but my read is that the administration favors an investment tax credit (ITC) for energy storage (often referred to as a “standalone storage ITC” or simply a “storage ITC”). Currently, energy storage only qualifies for a federal ITC when it is paired with solar.

A standalone storage ITC would improve the economics of energy storage projects across the board: projects that pencil today would be even more attractive economically, and the ITC will open markets that currently do not pencil. Analyst firm Wood Mackenzie has estimated a storage ITC would expand the U.S. market for energy storage by about 15 percent by 2024.

In Texas, which is seeking to build a more resilient grid in the wake of its recent crisis, a storage ITC could provide the measure of financial certainty some developers would need to proceed with energy storage projects in an otherwise uncertain market. In California and Massachusetts, some large-scale standalone storage projects would likely become viable, helping to maintain reliability by adding storage where it is most needed.

In states such as Arizona, Connecticut, and Virginia that are establishing new energy storage programs, a federal storage ITC would solidify the launch of those programs and provide a strong foundation for the energy storage marketplace in those states for years to come.

And for our solar developer and installer partners, a storage ITC would also create a tremendous opportunity to retrofit existing solar systems with energy storage and offer a new value proposition to customers they already know well.

The Interplay Between EVs and Storage

The American Jobs Plan codifies the Biden administration’s enthusiasm for electric vehicles by putting a price tag of $174 billion on achieving some important tactical milestones (e.g., building a 500,000 national EV charger network, electrifying 20% of school buses) in addition to the bigger-picture strategic goal of retooling the U.S. auto industry to win global EV market share.

What will become widely recognized, is that battery energy storage is the key resource for mitigating the impact of a huge influx of EVs onto the grid – and the larger the vehicles and fleets, the more essential energy storage becomes. Without storage, uncontrolled and unpredictable EV charging loads could unduly stress the grid and trigger expensive distribution system investments – which can be avoided with (cheaper) batteries.

Leveraging Massive Federal Purchasing Power for Clean Energy

Many observers, including me, opined that the federal government could accelerate job creation and economic growth via clean energy if it tapped into its immense purchasing power. Biden’s plan does exactly that, identifying procurement opportunities to electrify the federal postal fleet, source low-carbon construction materials and jumpstart clean energy manufacturing.

But perhaps most impressively, the plan announces the administration’s intention to purchase 24/7 clean power for federal buildings – which, it rightly points out, will “drive clean energy deployment across the market.” Pioneered by Google last fall, 24/7 clean energy sourcing is something only the most forward-thinking companies in the world have begun to embrace; that the U.S. federal government is moving in this direction as well only a matter of months after Google announced the concept, is good news for renewable energy and energy storage.

What’s Next?

In releasing the plan, the Biden administration has both identified its priorities and called upon Congress to act. Aspects of Biden’s plan may receive broad bipartisan support – energy storage in particular is known as a bipartisan winner – but its proposed funding mechanism, raising taxes on corporations and the wealthy, may not.

If Congress doesn’t act, Biden could seek to pass elements of his plan with a simple Senate majority through the budget reconciliation process (which recently produced the COVID relief bill) as early as September.

Closing Thought

The funding proposed for energy storage is just a tiny fraction of Biden’s overall plan, but it would still represent the federal government’s largest investment in storage. Why now?

The plan references Texas’ recent crisis and the massive economic toll of blackouts on the U.S. economy – up to $70 billion annually, according to the U.S. Department of Energy – and again, the desire to achieve 100% carbon-free energy by 2035.

By announcing unprecedented federal support for energy storage, the Biden administration is implicitly recognizing the key role energy storage will play in modernizing the grid and building a stronger, more competitive U.S. economy. As market signals go, that is about as favorable as it gets.

President Biden’s American Jobs Plan represents an important and potentially transformative step in the federal government’s support for clean energy and its role in job creation and economic growth. As someone who has worked for years alongside many of you in anticipation of such a plan, I am encouraged by the vision and I look forward to continuing to work together in making sure this vision becomes a reality.
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Porterhouse10 Porterhouse10 4 years ago
Nice PM, Biden Infrastructure
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realfast95 realfast95 4 years ago
Keep hope alive

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Porterhouse10 Porterhouse10 4 years ago
Lookin better
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Double-Trouble Double-Trouble 4 years ago
Should be law suite coming because of the delay and how the stock has been pulverized with little to any news!
Just goes to show how these executives operate and work with Wall Street!
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realfast95 realfast95 4 years ago

Star Peak Energy Transition Corp. & Stem, Inc. Announce Registration Statement Effectiveness & April 27, 2021 Scheduled Speci...
March 29 2021 - 05:09PM
Business Wire

All owners of STPK Common Stock as of March 4, 2021 are encouraged to vote their shares before April 26, 2021

Star Peak Energy Transition Corp. (NYSE: STPK), a publicly traded special purpose acquisition company (“Star Peak”), and Stem, Inc., a global leader in artificial intelligence (AI)-driven clean energy storage systems (“Stem”), today announced that Star Peak’s registration statement on Form S-4 (File No. 333-251397), relating to the previously announced merger of Star Peak and Stem, has been declared effective by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. Star Peak will mail Stockholders as of March 4, 2021 the definitive proxy statement/consent solicitation/prospectus relating to the Special Meeting of Star Peak Stockholders (the “Special Meeting”).
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realfast95 realfast95 4 years ago
Vote date set 4/27
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Double-Trouble Double-Trouble 4 years ago
Stock is under attack and nothing from this group?
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realfast95 realfast95 4 years ago
Strong competition. We need to team up with Tesla since we don't make the batteries.

Buffett Proposes A $8.3 Billion Fix For The Texas Power Grid... There Is Just One Catch
Tyler Durden's Photo
by Tyler Durden
Thursday, Mar 25, 2021 - 08:20 PM

https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/buffett-proposes-83-billion-fix-texas-power-grid-there-just-one-catch

One of the main lessons from the deadly Texas polar blast disaster last month which left millions of homes without power for days, is that it provides a great opportunity for entrepreneurs to offer (and implement) fixes. Not surprisingly, power pioneer Elon Musk did just that earlier this month when a Tesla subsidiary - Gambit Energy Storage LLC - was revealed to be secretively building a more than 100 megawatt energy storage project in Angleton, Texas, a town roughly 40 miles south of Houston (a battery that size could power about 20,000 homes on a hot summer day).

Now it's Warren Buffett's turn.

Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway has proposed an multi-billion plan to help Texas avoid a repeat of February’s blackouts: according to the proposal, the company to be known as Texas Emergency Power Reserve, would invest $8.3 billion to build many new gas-powered plants along with gas storage. That would add about 10,000 megawatts of reliability plants to ERCOT, the grid that sends electricity to about 90% of Texans.

According to the Dallas Morning News and Bloomberg, the conglomerate put together a presentation asking state lawmakers to approve a plan for a new company that would add about 10 gigawatts of gas plants and emergency gas storage.

“We really want to make sure that this never happens again. So we’re really wanting to partner with the state,” Chris Brown, chief executive officer of Berkshire Hathaway Energy Infrastructure Group, said in an interview, although what he really wanted is something else entirely as readers will find out shortly. “The proposal is simple: state residents should have a reliable source of backup power” he said, echoing Elon Musk's own vision of how to "fix" the dilapidated Texas power grid.

Ironically, if Berkshire is successful in its lobbying campaign, Texas would be adding a massive amount of new gas-fired capacity at a time when President Joe Biden is trying to shift the country away from fossil fuels, and in a state that’s invested heavily in wind and solar power (although was remind readers that it was precisely Texas' outsized reliance on wind power which prompted the collapse, as the cascading failures started once windmills failed due to the freezing temperatures).

And while superficially the proposal makes sense, with Berkshire proposing that the Texas grid operator retain control the plants and tap them to prevent blackouts like the one that left more than 4 million homes and businesses in the dark, there is one catch... or rather a few catches.

While Buffett would make a one time investment of $8.3BN, Berkshire would earn a whopping 9.3% risk free rate of return - unheard of in a day and age when there are $14 trillion in bonds trading with negative yields - which would be paid by consumers after approval from the Public Utility Commission. The Buffett proposal would also stick Texas power customers with paying the fee to cover the costs of the plants.

Additionally, the plan includes a major change to Texas’ deregulated power market, including guaranteed payments for the extra capacity.

In other words, Buffett is generously "offering" Texas taxpayers a deal where he makes a one-time payment and collects a return that is 6 times higher than 10Y Treasurys despite having roughly the same level of risk. In fact, under Buffett's proposal he would make his entire investment back in about 10 years. And while billionaire is laughing all the way to the bank, it is Texas taxpayers who end up footing the bill for any future costs which as February demonstrated, will be substantial.

A spokesman for Texas House Speaker Dade Phelan confirmed to Bloomberg that the office had received the slides and had met with Berkshire regarding the plan. However, as CreditSights utility analyst Andy DeVries writes, “we see little to no chance of Texas approving that Buffett proposal,” for one simple reason: "If they were going to spend that amount of money - which is a big if - they would do it with Texas companies."

Berkshire, however, is undaunted, and believes it could have its plan operational by the winter of 2023, according to the slides. The proposal would cost less than winterizing the state’s power generators or creating a so-called capacity market where generation units are paid to provide supplies in future years, according to Berkshire.

The additional capacity created by Berkshire would ensure that no customer would be without power for more than three hours, the company said. The Texas Reliability Corp. would offer a $4 billion performance guaranty provided by an investment graded counterparty.

The other catch: Buffett's proposal flies against the very principles that makes the Texas energy market unique. The proposal will face loud opposition, especially from heavy industrial users of electricity who want to pay for power they use, not power pledged for emergencies, which is precisely what Berkshire - which has perfected the insurance model - is hoping to implement. Texas generators also would want to get in on the action, and one observer called the Berkshire proposal “a one-company capacity market.”

It's why Height Securities analyst Josh Price said he was “skeptical” that the idea would have traction with lawmakers.

“The key question will be whether policymakers are willing to forego market-based principles if a non-competitive approach would be more cost-effective,” he said in an email.

Non-competitive being the key word here, and applies perfectly to Buffett, 90, who is hoping to extend his folksy crony capitalist ways to yet another state. We can only hope that Texans are smart enough to read between the lines.

But the biggest reason why the Berkshire proposal won't work is that competitors would love to be part of the proposed solution, too. And while generators have proposed a capacity market for Texas in recent years, lawmakers have passed on those bills. They will do the same again, unless somehow their palms end up being well-greased just before the decision is made.

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realfast95 realfast95 4 years ago
U.S. regulator opens inquiry into Wall Street's blank check IPO frenzy - sources

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-sec-spacs-exclusive/u-s-regulator-opens-inquiry-into-wall-streets-blank-check-ipo-frenzy-sources-idUSKBN2BH09F

nothing specific to STPK/STEM just more negative headlines of the sector.
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Porterhouse10 Porterhouse10 4 years ago
I'm waiting, my avg is higher, but I'll be adding, already headed there
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Double-Trouble Double-Trouble 4 years ago
Always amazed me when a stock like this is get taken to the wood-shed not ONE executive ever comes out with PR. It’s like they are enjoying the retail investors getting screwed and it the retail folks that make up ton of the revenues by purchasing there service. Crazy they do nothing to slow the twisting of knife and then make fortune of same groups the screw.maybe Reddit crowd has it right and we should just gang up and cause crazy swing especially when it’s time when mock-outs are over and executive looking to cash out or if they have posted sales timing just drive price into shitter to screw with them! No f—ing morals for most part with publicly trade firms!
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Double-Trouble Double-Trouble 4 years ago
That’s all great stuff maybe they and friends will let tank under $20 tomorrow!
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realfast95 realfast95 4 years ago
more propaganda from stem twitter

https://www.powermag.com/best-is-yet-to-come-for-energy-storage-technology/

‘Best Is Yet to Come’ for Energy Storage Technology

Advancements in batteries, along with an improved regulatory environment and more investment, could make this decade the Roaring ’20s for energy storage.

Many areas have been considered a focus for the electric power industry in recent years. The grid continues to face several challenges, as technology advancements transform the way electricity is produced and delivered.

Industry analysts have told POWER that energy storage, be it from batteries, thermal systems, mechanical storage, hydrogen production, or pumped hydropower, is critical to the advancement of the power sector. The need for storage is considered paramount to the electrification of transportation and other businesses, and to continued growth in renewable energy.

“For energy storage, the best is definitely yet to come,” said Ryan Brown, co-founder and CEO of Salient Energy, a Canada-based zinc-ion battery manufacturer. Brown told POWER, “We know that the industry is still in its infancy in almost all respects. While adoption is already meaningful and rapidly accelerating, a clean energy world will require trillions of dollars’ worth of additional capacity to be installed.

“The increasingly favorable regulatory environment for energy storage, combined with the evolution of business models that are bringing more capital into the space, means that the 2020s will be a breakout decade for the energy storage sector,” Brown said.

1. Tesla is among the companies driving growth in energy storage. The company’s Megapack technology, shown here in an artist’s rendering, is a utility-scale storage product. The company in a recent earnings report said its 2020 energy storage deployments “for the first time … surpassed 3 GWh in a single year, which is an 83% increase compared to the prior year [2019].” Courtesy: Tesla

The U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) in a summer 2020 report said batteries are a key part of the energy transition (see sidebar), especially when it comes to providing grid energy storage and electrifying transport. Battery energy storage systems (BESS) have grown significantly in the U.S. over the past decade (Figure 1). The EIA said that in 2010, seven U.S. battery storage systems accounted for 59 MW of power capacity. By year-end 2018, there were 125 systems in operation, with 869 MW of installed power capacity. Those EIA figures do not include recent capacity additions, including the 1.2 GW of storage installed in the U.S. in 2020 set to come online in the next year, most of it in California.

Caribbean’s Largest System Takes Shape

Ground was broken in December for construction of the Caribbean’s largest solar generation and energy storage system, being built on St. Kitts Island. It’s an example of how storage is supporting the power grid, particularly in developing areas. The Government of St. Kitts and Nevis, and the state-owned St. Kitts Electric Co. (SKELEC) launched the project with the owner Leclanché, a Swiss energy storage company that is serving as the prime engineering, procurement, and construction (EPC) contractor. The system will provide between 30% and 35% of the island’s baseload energy needs for the next 20–25 years.

The $70 million microgrid project is a fully integrated system consisting of three core components: a 35.7-MW solar photovoltaic system (the solar field), a 14.8-MW/45.7-MWh lithium-ion battery energy storage system (BESS), and Leclanché’s proprietary energy management system (EMS) software. The system’s batteries will be housed in 14 custom-designed enclosures near the main SKELEC power station and adjacent to the solar field. A portion of the generated electricity will meet the island’s daily peak power demand; the remaining energy will charge the large-scale BESS to meet a second peak demand after the sun sets.

“This clean energy project marks a significant milestone for our citizens, tourist economy, our broader business community, and indeed the entire Caribbean region,” said Dr. The Honorable Timothy Harris, St. Kitts and Nevis prime minister. “The amount of carbon dioxide emissions we will reduce—nearly three-quarters of a million metric tons over 20 years—is a significant demonstration of our strong policy for clean, renewable energy.”

Leclanché has worked with SKELEC to develop the system. The company will own and operate the facility under its strategic build, own, and operate model, and invest through its St. Kitts subsidiary, SOLEC Power, with partner Solrid. Its EMS software will integrate all the components of the system and efficiently manage the delivery of electricity to the SKELEC grid, while also providing spinning reserve, frequency regulation, and load-balancing functions.

“Together, we have designed a system whose construction and ongoing energy production will be paid for over time from the sale of clean and reliable solar energy. We are pleased to have accomplished both objectives while developing a project financeable by well-established institutional investors,” said Leclanché CEO Anil Srivastava.

Once completed, which is anticipated in the first half of 2022, the solar and storage system will replace more than four million gallons of diesel fuel per year. It is expected to generate about 61,300 MWh of electricity in its first year.

—Bryan Urban is executive vice president North America for Leclanché.

Kelly Speakes-Backman, former CEO of the Energy Storage Association who was recently named to a top post at the U.S. Dept. of Energy, told the audience at POWER’s Distributed Energy Conference last year that additions of battery storage doubled in 2020, and probably would have tripled if not for construction slowdowns caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.

Lower battery costs have supported growth. The EIA said the cost of utility-scale battery storage in the U.S. fell almost 70% between 2015 and 2018. The U.S. National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) projects that increased battery production, and market competition, will continue to drive costs down. NREL recently said it sees mid-range costs for lithium-ion batteries falling another 45% by 2030.

“Lithium-ion batteries remain the defining technology for new energy storage projects,” said Brown, while noting change is coming. “New technologies that offer performance and material cost improvements, while taking advantage of lithium-ion’s low-cost manufacturing, show serious promise for the space.”
Range of Solutions

The many types of energy storage technologies include batteries, with a range of electrochemical storage solutions, including advanced chemistry batteries, flow batteries, and capacitors. There’s also thermal storage, capturing heat and cold to create energy on demand or offset energy needs. Mechanical storage includes technologies to harness kinetic or gravitational energy to store electricity.

2. The Moss Landing Energy Storage Facility is located at the site of Vistra Energy’s natural gas-fired Moss Landing Power Plant in California, owned by Vistra since it acquired the facility’s previous owner, Dynegy, in 2018. Phase 1 of the energy storage project was connected to the power grid in December 2020. The 300-MW/1,200-MWh battery energy storage system is among the world’s largest. Phase 2 of the project is expected to begin operating this year, adding another 100 MW/400 MWh of capacity. Courtesy: Vistra Energy

“We’ve been following storage for years, and it’s always been ‘almost’ there,” said Morten Lund, a partner in the Energy Development group with Stoel Rives, and chair of the firm’s Energy Storage Initiative. Lund said having storage attached to solar power installations “is almost standard for the U.S. You can use peakers [gas-fired peaking plants] for your short-term leveling, and storage when you need to take care of overgeneration. It makes it easily the most cost-effective solution for that problem in California [Figure 2].

“We’ve been through a few technology cycles,” Lund told POWER. “Lithium-ion is the dominant technology, and is likely to stay that for the foreseeable future. It’s relatively cheap, and it works, [and] the stuff that works better right now is more expensive. In this country, these decisions are made by the market, and the market looks for the good-enough, low-cost thing of the moment.”

Storage tech includes pumped hydropower, creating large-scale reservoirs of energy with stored water. And then there’s hydrogen—where excess electricity generation can be converted into hydrogen via electrolysis and stored.

“Hydrogen is by far the most exciting recent technology to be advanced by industry, albeit, it, too, is an old technology that has been given a new lease on life,” said Brian Restall, senior director for Quinbrook Infrastructure Partners, a renewable energy investment company. “Hydrogen is by far the biggest competition to batteries for stationary and vehicle applications.”

Restall said it’s important to develop alternatives to lithium-ion-based storage systems. “As electric vehicles become more accepted and popular, lithium-ion batteries’ supply chains are coming under pressure to supply both stationary and vehicle applications,” Restall told POWER. “For stationary energy storage, lithium-ion has a relatively limited ability to support 2-hour-plus energy storage needs. As a result of this and also ESG [environmental, social, and governance] concerns over cobalt, it is good to see industry investing in alternative chemistry such as LFP [lithium-iron-phosphate] to replace lithium-ion, and also the rise in flow batteries such as Eos [which offers a zinc hybrid cathode device].”

“I am hoping that hydrogen as an energy storage medium will become viable. Hydrogen has almost been there for a long time,” said Kelly Echols, a partner with Stoel Rives and co-chair of the firm’s Energy Technologies Working Group. “I’m hopeful that we may actually be on the cusp, where this P2H [power to hydrogen] will become a reality, where it can be produced at a low-enough point to be cost-effective.”

Echols told POWER, “There does seem to be a demand, essentially in a fuel cell. You can store it longer, and with fuel cells, the storage capability, the ways you can hold onto that hydrogen, it could be longer. There does seem to be a lot of interest in this combined electrical hydrogen future, where they’re complementary to each other, not competitive… where hydrogen is used in long-haul trucking, and we see interest in air transport.”

Eric Martin, a Stoel Rives partner focused on natural resource development, told POWER, “From a hydrogen perspective, the utilities that are facing this prospect are where the public is concerned about GHG [greenhouse gas] emissions, and climate change. It’s a way to adapt their existing infrastructure in a less-climate-intensive way. Then there’s the demand function from the end-users. If you’re the owner/operator of a fleet, and you’re [deciding] what type of vehicles you’re going to have, then it’s feasible [hydrogen] could be implemented.”
Hardware, Software, Reliability

The hardware involved with energy storage—batteries, inverters, etc.—receives a lot of attention in storage discussions. Shamik Mehta, director for product marketing for Data Platform at Intertrust, told POWER, though, that “software is one of the most important BESS components. The software controls and sets limits on how much each cell can be charged to, discharged to, how fast to charge or discharge, and more.”

Mehta said the software “has to detect the state of charge and depth of discharge of each individual cell and monitor each cell’s health and temperature. When a typical battery pack can run up to tens of thousands of cells, this quickly becomes a challenge. Whether it’s energy arbitration, demand response, or other energy storage applications, the software and its associated algorithms decide the right times to charge and discharge, controlling how much, far, or fast to charge or discharge each cell and pack, and when.”

“Where the battery really has a place is in reliability,” said Anthony Shaw, CEO and founder of Progeneration Energy, a Texas-based energy project developer. “I think storage is the next evolution. If you’re comfortable with solar, then the next step is to ask about the storage aspect. Right now, for many, storage is kind of a nice to have. The assumption is that if the battery is being used simply to store excess power, it doesn’t pencil.”

Shaw told POWER about a project his company worked on—a facility that “wanted the added benefit of backup power. For them, having a storage component made sense.” He said the cost of batteries has been an issue, but technology advancements are helping in that regard.

“They’re moving in the right direction, and they’re moving very fast,” he said. “The cost of [initiating] scaled production is probably the next step.”
Zinc Air—a Breakthrough?

An international group of researchers in January announced they had reached a breakthrough in the development of zinc-air batteries, an alternative to lithium-ion that could be cheaper to produce and involve fewer mining challenges. The group, led by Wei Sun, a researcher at the University of Münster in Germany, said they are close to producing a battery that won’t catch on fire thanks to its incorporation water, along with a hydrophobic zinc salt.

The battery could be especially beneficial for utility-scale energy storage, said Chunsheng Wang, director of the Center for Research in Extreme Batteries at the University of Maryland and a co-author of a paper that was published in the journal Science. “We think this has potential to compete with lithium-ion batteries,” Wang said.

Zinc-air batteries typically have not been used for grid energy storage because of their chemical instability and relatively short lifecycle, the group said. But Wang said these batteries could be safer than lithium-ion cells because they incorporate nonflammable water and “open cell architecture,” rather than a closed structure. Wang said zinc also is less environmentally destructive to mine and produce compared with lithium.

Roberto Denti, operations director at Greece-based storage developer Systems Sunlight, told POWER that while most of the focus in energy storage “has been on the consumer automotive sector, there is significant opportunity for development in the industrial sector—more specifically, the renewable energy sector, to create safe, reliable, and sustainable batteries for heavy-duty applications such as energy storage for solar and wind farms. The opportunity also lies in other areas where industrial batteries are needed such as shipping, electric buses, and automated guided vehicles,” or AGVs, which is Sunlight’s market.

“By developing new technologies that will usher in a clean energy future, we will hopefully see a wide-scale adoption of energy storage applications, leading to a fully electrified industry,” Denti said.

—Darrell Proctor is associate editor for POWER (@POWERmagazine).
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Jackmcc222 Jackmcc222 4 years ago
doubled my position this AM. In hard now.
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realfast95 realfast95 4 years ago
Bouncing some at mid-day. Hopefully a conclusion of the head and shoulders decline

chart is delayed 15 minutes. Current price is 25.38

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Porterhouse10 Porterhouse10 4 years ago
Adding
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realfast95 realfast95 4 years ago
Policies & Issues | Federal
Federal Focus: Investment Tax Credit (ITC)
Make energy storage eligible for the stand-alone investment tax credit #StorageITC

About the legislation

The bipartisan Energy Storage Tax Incentive and Deployment Act (S. 627 / H.R. 1648) makes the ITC available for stand-alone energy storage systems. In addition to putting storage on a level playing field with other energy technologies, an ITC will accelerate the growth of jobs and investment in the American energy storage industry, contributing to economic recovery while increasing power system resilience and accelerating decarbonization.

ESA is advocating that Congress make energy storage technologies eligible for the ITC under Internal Revenue Code Sections 48 and 25D. Additionally, since tax equity is likely to remain scarce in the near term, an ITC should allow businesses to reduce reliance on costly and time-consuming tax equity transactions where possible, such as provided for in the GREEN Act (H.R. 848).
Who supports it

This is a common-sense piece of legislation that would put people to work, increase our electric grid’s resilience and help achieve the country’s climate goals. It’s why a broad coalition of groups, citizens and leaders support the legislation.

150+ national trade associations, public interest organizations, and companies >> urge House and Senate leadership to add storage ITC to infrastructure bill
U.S. Senate: Sen. Martin Heinrich (D-N.M.), Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine)
U.S. House: Rep. Earl Blumenauer (D-Ore.), Rep. Doyle (D-Pa.) and Rep. Vern Buchanan (R-Fla.)
State legislators: California >>, Massachusetts >>
National environmental organizations >>
Faith-based organizations >>

More information on storage ITC legislation:

Read a summary of the Energy Storage Tax Incentive and Deployment Act (S. 627 / H.R. 1684) >>
How energy storage reduces greenhouse gas emissions >>

https://energystorage.org/policies-issues/federal/itc/


Alongside the @storage_ESA
, we urge @SenSchumer
, @RonWyden
, @LeaderMcConnell
, and @MikeCrapo
to pass #S627, the #bipartisan #EnergyStorage Tax Incentive and Deployment Act. The act ensures a level playing field for storage with #StorageITC:

Stem
@stempowered
·
1h
Alongside the @storage_ESA
, we urge @SpeakerPelosi
, @RepRichardNeal
, @GOPLeader
, and @RepKevinBrady
to pass #HR1684, the #bipartisan #EnergyStorage Tax Incentive and Deployment Act. The act ensures a level playing field for storage with #StorageITC:

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Porterhouse10 Porterhouse10 4 years ago
Buy the cheapies
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realfast95 realfast95 4 years ago
all I know is that it was Q1, now it's early Q2.
It takes 3-4 weeks lead time for a proxy to vote.
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trickledownfacists trickledownfacists 4 years ago
How long did they delay it?
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