Can Bloom Energy build them?
3 days ago
- #energy-infrastructure
- #manufacturing-scaling
- #clean-energy
- Bloom Energy's backlog surged to around $20 billion, up 65% year-over-year, with major deals from Oracle, AEP, and Brookfield, despite having shipped only 1.5 GW in its 23-year history.
- Demand is driven by hyperscalers willing to pay a premium to avoid lengthy grid interconnection queues, with fuel cells offering deployment in 12-18 months compared to years for alternatives.
- Scaling manufacturing from 1 GW/year to over 4 GW/year poses challenges, including ceramic production complexity, a key supplier (MTAR) scaling up, and reliance on scandium from China, which faces export controls.
- Fuel cells are capital-intensive ($7,000-$8,000/kW) but competitive when considering faster deployment and levelized costs, especially with federal tax credits, though they depend on natural gas and face gas pipeline bottlenecks.
- Bloom leads the stationary SOFC market with ~60% share, facing minimal competition at scale, but must manage risks like customer concentration, execution in ceramic manufacturing, and degradation at gigawatt-scale deployments.
- Financials show inflection with first GAAP-profitable quarter in Q1 2026, but high valuation (25x price-to-sales) and reliance on a few customers (e.g., Oracle) pose risks if scaling or contracts falter.
- Fuel cells serve as a bridge for AI-driven power demand until grid capacity improves, with Bloom's success hinging on scaling manufacturing quickly to capture this interim market.