Enel looks to distribution, renewables for Latin American growth

People walk past the logo of Italy's biggest utility Enel at their Rome headquarter November 11, 2014. REUTERS/Tony Gentile

By Rosalba O'Brien and Antonio De la Jara SANTIAGO (Reuters) - Italian utility Enel SpA wants to simplify its Latin American operations and focus on electricity distribution and renewable energy as it increases investment in the region's growing markets, its chief executive said on Thursday. The group, Europe's most indebted utility, gradually has been shifting attention away from Italy and Spain to emerging markets with abundant resources and good growth prospects. Over the next five years, it will spend around 7 billion euros ($8.7 billion) on its local assets, which are held by Santiago-listed Enersis SA . Another 2 billion will go to Enel Green Power SpA , which has solar, geothermal, biomass, hydroelectric and wind operations. The spending will likely increase in March and the focus will be on building distribution networks and on renewable energy projects, Enel Chief Executive Officer Francesco Starace told journalists in Santiago. "I think at the end we are going to have more networks, investment in connection and distribution infrastructure, quite a lot more renewables, and generation. But networks and renewables more than generation." In September, Enel agreed to buy the controlling stake in Enersis held by its Endesa SA subsidiary, and has appointed local executives to exert more direct control over its Latin American assets. The first priority will be streamlining operations in the region over the next year, simplifying a structure that now includes some 80 separate businesses. That could save between 10 and 20 percent on Enersis' capital expenditure, Starace said. "This structure over the last 15 years served to put us at a distance, to keep Latin America far away," he said. "What we want to do now is get close to Latin America, and we're going to do it beginning with Chile, Brazil second, (then) Colombia, Peru and I think Argentina will be fifth or will wait." Currency controls, high inflation and a volatile economy have scared all but the bravest investors away from Argentina and Starace said Enel was unlikely to invest there any time soon. "We will look at all opportunities that make sense; investment that creates value for us in the five countries, with the exception of Argentina, where I think it doesn't make sense to invest with the economic and political climate at the moment," he added. (Writing by Rosalba O'Brien. Editing by Andre Grenon)