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Rising with the sun: Why solar power still shines for investors

Energy, Industrial, Market News
TSX:NPI
13 February 2026 10:20 (EST)
Solar panels

(Source: Adobe Stock Images)

After a bruising November 2025—marked by a dividend reset and project timing challenges—Northland Power (TSX:NPI) is slowly regaining its footing.

Beneath the headlines, there’s a durable, long‑duration renewables platform with meaningful solar exposure alongside wind and storage, supported by long‑term contracts and a multi‑gigawatt development pipeline.

For investors, the key is separating short‑term sentiment from long‑term cash‑flow growth—especially as global electricity demand swells on the back of AI, electrification, and data‑center build‑outs.

The solar angle: Where Northland fits in a power‑hungry world

Northland isn’t a pure‑play solar module maker; it’s an owner‑operator and developer of utility‑scale renewable assets across regions, with solar as a core pillar alongside offshore/onshore wind, storage, and efficient gas. That diversified mix matters: power systems need firm capacity and complementary generation profiles to meet spikier demand curves—especially as digital workloads (AI, cloud, and edge computing) push grids to their limits. Solar helps Northland broaden its generation stack and time‑of‑day production, particularly when paired with batteries. Public investor guides frequently cite Northland as a leading Canadian renewables name with solar in the portfolio, not just wind—useful context if you’re building a solar‑themed basket rather than chasing single‑technology firms.

The macro tailwinds are real: sector strategists flag power generation to support the AI buildout as one of 2026’s biggest themes; that creates a supportive backdrop for developers with banked interconnections, shovel‑ready sites, and access to project finance.

What went wrong in Q3 2025—and why it spooked the market

On November 12, 2025, Northland reported a mixed quarter: revenue and adjusted EBITDA rose ~13 per cent year over year, and free cash flow improved materially. But a C$527 million non‑cash impairment (largely tied to North Sea assets) swung results to a net loss. Management also cut the dividend by 40 per cent (to C$0.72 annually) to preserve balance‑sheet flexibility for large projects. Shares fell 20–30 per cent in the aftermath as income investors headed for the exits.

Compounding the optics, the company cautioned that slower‑than‑expected turbine commissioning at the 1.0 GW Hai Long offshore wind project could trim 2026 pre‑completion revenue by C$150–200 million (Northland share), even as the project remained on track for full commercial operations in 2027. The market hates moving targets, and the combination of a dividend cut + timing friction hit sentiment hard.

(Northland Power Inc. stock chart – Feb. 2025 to Feb. 2026.)

What’s still working: Contracts, pipeline, and execution

Step back from the quarterly noise and a steadier picture emerges:

Why solar within northland’s mix still matters for investors

  1. Diversification and correlation: Adding solar to offshore/onshore wind smooths generation risk. Correlations of wind and solar generation can be low; adding storage improves dispatchability. In practice, that can stabilize project‑level cash flows and reduce portfolio volatility.
  2. Grid Need and AI load: 2026 sector outlooks emphasize surging electricity demand; developers with solar + storage can deliver capacity faster than many thermal or nuclear pathways, benefiting from policy support and contract auctions.
  3. Capital discipline post‑reset: The dividend reset hurt, but it also reallocates capital to higher‑IRR projects—many of which are renewable (including solar) or storage. If management hits milestones without further balance‑sheet strain, equity holders can be rewarded through NAV growth and eventual payout growth.

Valuation and sentiment: What has to go right from here

Portfolio context: Sizing Northland’s solar exposure

For investors building a solar‑tilted basket, Northland can play the “utility‑scale developer/operator” role—complementing pure‑plays and component makers. Public overviews list Northland among Canada’s top renewables with meaningful solar alongside wind and gas, offering contracted cash flows and global diversification—useful attributes if you want solar exposure without manufacturing cyclicality.

Peer lens: Canadian Solar and Enphase Energy (quick look)

Canadian Solar (NASDAQ:CSIQ)Panels and projects (Global)

Enphase Energy (NASDAQ:ENPH) Residential solar electronics and storage

Bottom Line: A solar‑relevant developer that’s reset for execution

Northland Power’s 2025 reset didn’t change the world’s need for more clean electricity—or the role that solar plays in meeting it. What it did do is lower the bar for expectations and reset the payout, giving management room to fund an ambitious build program across solar, wind, and storage. If they deliver on construction milestones and avoid further impairments, the equity case can improve steadily from here.

Next step: Treat Northland (and solar peers like Canadian Solar and Enphase) as starting points—not endpoints. Dive into project‑level updates, contract durations, leverage, and interest‑rate sensitivity. For each name, model cash flows across rate scenarios and stress‑test timelines and capex. Then size your positions accordingly.

Investors should deepen their due diligence—reviewing filings, earnings calls, and project milestones—before committing capital to Northland Power, Canadian Solar, or Enphase Energy. A disciplined, research‑first approach is the best way to turn a volatile sector into a long‑term compounder.

Don’t let the sun go down on your investments

Northland Power Inc. is a global power producer dedicated to helping the clean energy transition by producing electricity from clean, renewable resources.

Northland Power stock (TSX:NPI) opened trading 0.70 per cent higher at C$19.32 and has risen more than 12 per cent since this time last year.

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Stockhouse does not provide investment advice or recommendations. All investment decisions should be made based on your own research and consultation with a registered investment professional. The issuer is solely responsible for the accuracy of the information contained herein. For full disclaimer information, please click here.


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