Wind giants welcome profit beats as war in Iran spurs energy pivot

At Siemens Energy’s facility in Hangzhou, Zhejiang Province, China, an employee dedicates efforts to the core components of circuit breakers meant for wind turbines as of February 28, 2026.

Image Credit: China News Service via Getty Images

The ongoing conflict involving Iran has markedly accelerated the shift towards clean energy, acting as a propellant for wind energy leaders as nations re-evaluate the critical role of renewables in enhancing energy security.

On Wednesday, Vestas, the Danish wind turbine manufacturer, announced a significant surge in its first-quarter profits, attributing the growth to better management of both onshore and offshore operations, despite the increasing political instability.

Similarly, Danish utility company Orsted exceeded profit expectations during the first quarter, while Norway’s energy giant Equinor, traditionally focused on oil and gas, informed CNBC that the turmoil in the Middle East is poised to enhance returns from its clean technology sector.

Equinor’s Chief Financial Officer, Torgrim Reitan, highlighted that the motivations driving the energy transition have evolved due to the conflict in Iran, shifting away from solely decarbonization towards priorities like energy security, self-reliance, and independence.

“In Europe, we see that there is clearly big momentum behind that,” Reitan told CNBC’s “Europe Early Edition.”

Equinor, which posted its strongest quarterly profit in three years on Wednesday, has three large offshore wind developments in the U.S., Poland and U.K., with the latter slated to become the world’s largest offshore wind farm when it enters production.

The oil and gas giant joined its industry rivals in reporting bumper first-quarter results, benefitting from soaring fossil fuel prices since the U.S. and Israeli-led war against Iran began on Feb. 28.

Analysts expect the fallout from the Iran war energy shock to prompt countries to direct even more investment toward clean energy resources — a trend likely to benefit companies with exposure to green tech.

“Our priority is to deliver the projects we have under development and beyond that clearly we will have to see significant return from that business to invest — but we do believe that what is going on now will actually help the returns in sort of the transition industries,” Equinor’s Reitan said.

This view assumes that oil and gas prices become permanently more expensive, which in turn could allow returns from renewables to become more competitive.

Energy transition

Denmark’s Orsted said events in the Middle East had reaffirmed the need to accelerate Europe’s energy transition, highlighting the role of offshore wind in particular as a key component in this shift.

“When we look at what’s happening in the world, there’s no reason not to switch gears in the energy transition towards renewables in Europe. Europe is spending billions every week on fossil fuel imports — but it doesn’t have to be that way,” Orsted CEO Rasmus Errboe said in a statement.

“Offshore wind and other renewables can deliver secure, green energy and can significantly lower total system costs for households and businesses when deployed at scale,” he added.

Wind turbine equipment are seen before being shiped abroad at Lianyungang port in Lianyungang in China’s eastern Jiangsu province on April 14, 2026.

– | Afp | Getty Images

Orsted, which has struggled in recent years with soaring costs and supply chain disruption, has doubled down on its European businesses following resistance to U.S. wind power from the White House.

U.S. President Donald Trump has a long history of mocking wind power, claiming at the World Economic Forum earlier this year that wind turbines destroy land and lose money as he took aim at the European Union’s energy policy.

EU Climate Commissioner Wopke Hoekstra dismissed Trump’s criticism as “nothing new” at the time, saying the region takes “a fundamentally different view” on the transition away from fossil fuels.

Data centers

Vestas CEO Henrik Andersen on Wednesday welcomed the firm’s best first-quarter earnings since 2018, saying the better-than-expected result bodes well for the rest of the year.

“We are in a much better place, probably than what we expected to be a few months ago,” Andersen told CNBC’s “Squawk Box Europe,” before seeking to highlight the benefits of electrifying the grid.

Vestas CEO: Energy crisis highlighting Europe's reliance on imports

When asked about whether the company is meeting with data center builders to discuss how renewable power can support the buildout of AI, Vestas’ CEO said he was due to travel to the U.S. over the weekend “and not surprisingly, that is part of the journey as well.”

In what appeared to be a thinly veiled reference to Trump, Andersen said: “Just because one person in the world has a maybe wrong perception of what reality … is, that doesn’t take the rest of the community off the scale. So, things keep motoring.”

Not everyone is convinced that investors will buy into the idea that recent geopolitical tensions could materially accelerate the renewables investment cycle.

“Overall, while energy security concerns can reinforce the long-term case for renewables, we see limited evidence that the Iran conflict is driving a near-term step change in fundamentals,” Tancrede Fulop, senior equity analyst at Morningstar, told CNBC by email.

“Among the two, Vestas appears better positioned to benefit from any acceleration in renewable deployment, whereas Orsted remains focused on executing its existing project pipeline,” he added.

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