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


An employee works on core components of circuit breakers for wind turbines at Siemens Energy’s Hangzhou Plant on February 28, 2026 in Hangzhou, Zhejiang Province of China.

China News Service | China News Service | Getty Images

The Iran war appears to have supercharged the clean energy transition, providing a catalyst for wind power giants as countries reassess the role of renewables in shoring up energy security.

Danish wind turbine maker Vestas reported an unexpectedly large first-quarter profit rise on Wednesday, citing improved execution of its onshore and offshore businesses despite growing political uncertainty.

Danish utility Orsted also posted stronger-than-expected profit through the first three months of the year, while Norway’s Equinor, which is primarily an oil and gas major, told CNBC that the Middle East crisis is set to deliver a boost to returns in its clean tech division.

Torgrim Reitan, chief financial officer at Equinor, said that the drivers behind the energy transition have clearly shifted amid the Iran war, moving from a focus on decarbonization to issues such as energy security, self-sufficiency 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.

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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.

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…



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

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