Company profile

Future of E.ON

#
Rank
101
| Quantumrun Global 1000

E.ON is a European holding company that operates one of the biggest investor-owned electric utility service providers in the world. It is based in Essen, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany. The name of the company originates from the Greek word aeon which means an age.

Home Country:
Sector:
Industry:
Energy
Website:
Founded:
2000
Global employee count:
43138
Domestic employee count:
17239
Number of domestic locations:

Financial Health

Revenue:
$38173000000 EUR
3y average revenue:
$64641333333 EUR
Operating expenses:
$14529000000 EUR
3y average expenses:
$18647666667 EUR
Funds in reserve:
$5574000000 EUR
Market country
Revenue from country
0.56
Market country
Revenue from country
0.21

Asset Performance

  1. Product/Service/Dept. name
    Electricity
    Product/Service revenue
    54522000000
  2. Product/Service/Dept. name
    Gas
    Product/Service revenue
    56602000000
  3. Product/Service/Dept. name
    Other
    Product/Service revenue
    5094000000

Innovation assets and Pipeline

Global brand rank:
207
Investment into R&D:
$14000000 EUR
Total patents held:
17

All company data collected from its 2016 annual report and other public sources. The accuracy of this data and the conclusions derived from them depend on this publicly accessible data. If a data point listed above is discovered to be inaccurate, Quantumrun will make the necessary corrections to this live page. 

DISRUPTION VULNERABILITY

Belonging to the energy sector means this company will be affected directly and indirectly by a number of disruptive opportunities and challenges over the coming decades. While described in detail within Quantumrun’s special reports, these disruptive trends can be summarized along the following broad points:

*First off, the most obvious disruptive trend is the shrinking cost and increasing energy generating capacity of renewable sources of electricity, such as wind, tidal, geothermal and (especially) solar. The economics of renewables are advancing at such a rate that further investments into more traditional sources of electricity, such as coal, gas, petroleum, and nuclear, are becoming less competitive in many parts of the world.
*Concurrent with the growth of renewables is the shrinking cost and increasing energy storing capacity of utility-scale batteries that can store electricity from renewables (like solar) during the day for release during the evening.
*The energy infrastructure in much of North America and Europe is decades old and is currently in the two-decade-long process of being rebuilt and reimagined. This will result in the installation of smart grids that are more stable and resilient, and will spur the development of a more efficient and decentralized energy grid in many parts of the world.
*The growing cultural awareness and acceptance of climate change is accelerating the public's demand for clean energy, and ultimately, their government's investment into cleantech infrastructure projects.
*As Africa, Asia, and South America continue to develop over the next two decades, their populations’ increasing demand first world living conditions will spur demand for modern energy infrastructure that will keep energy sector building contracts going strong into the foreseeable future.
*Significant breakthroughs in Thorium and fusion energy will be made by the mid-2030s, leading to their rapid commercialization and global adoption.

COMPANY’S FUTURE PROSPECTS

Company Headlines