The mood at the WindEurope conference in Madrid last week was buoyant, with over 15,000 delegates celebrating a sector that ploughed €45 billion into new European capacity in 2025. For ABO Energy, however, the contrast could hardly have been starker. The Wiesbaden-based developer of wind and solar parks is grappling with one of the worst financial crises in its history, having posted a net loss of roughly €170 million on total revenues of €230 million for the 2025 financial year.
The damage stems from a toxic mix of too-low remuneration from German wind auctions, project delays abroad, and impairment charges of €35 million. The share price has been obliterated, collapsing from over €45 to just under €4 in a matter of months — a decline of more than 90%.
A Leadership Vacuum at the Worst Possible Moment
Compounding the financial distress, chief financial officer Alexander Reinicke left the company in March with immediate effect and no named successor. His responsibilities have been distributed among the remaining management team, leaving a gap at a time when the company is fighting for survival.
The board is now racing to stabilise operations while simultaneously pursuing a strategic transformation from pure project developer to independent power producer — a shift that would generate steadier, recurring revenues from a portfolio of owned wind and solar farms. The target is a net profit of €50 million by 2027, but that ambition lacks a financial foundation without fresh capital from new investors.
Creditors Hold the Line — for Now
The immediate threat of a liquidity crunch has been averted by creditor support. Since January 2026, a standstill agreement with key lenders has been in place. In early March, holders of the company’s 2024/2029 corporate bond voted with over 99% approval to suspend a negative pledge until the end of 2026, allowing ABO Energy to post collateral for future project bids.
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A creditor representative has also set up a direct communication channel for investors, while management is securing short-term cash inflows through the sale of large projects in Colombia and Canada. The aim is purely to shore up liquidity.
Pipeline Progress Offers a Glimmer
Operationally, the company is still making headway. In the latest auction by Germany’s Federal Network Agency, ABO Energy secured permits for two wind farm expansions in North Rhine-Westphalia and Baden-Württemberg. Its approved onshore wind portfolio in Germany now stands at 650 megawatts.
In the Main-Tauber district, a ground-mounted photovoltaic plant with 7.3 megawatts of capacity is being built in cooperation with TRICERA energy, supplemented by a battery storage unit. It is the fourth such joint venture between the two partners.
Three Dates That Will Define the Year
Whether the turnaround plan can stabilise the cash position before creditor patience runs out will become clearer at three key milestones. The audited consolidated financial statements for 2025 are due in June, providing the first full picture of the damage. Shareholders will vote on the company’s future direction at the annual general meeting in Wiesbaden on 13 August. And the half-year figures for 2026, due in September, will reveal whether the growing project pipeline is finally translating into sustainable cash flows.
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