NextEra Energy, Inc. (NEE): Can Climate Change Propel This Dividend Stock?

After hinting at serious steps during his inauguration, President Obama announced his last climate change policy initiatives last week. What it lacks in detail, it makes up for in opinion. With some energy sources in and others out, utility dividend stocks could see some major mix-ups. For savvy investors, there’s an underwhelming small dividend stock swinger that could be setting itself up for home runs in the near future. Here’s what you need to know.

NextEra Energy, Inc. (NYSE:NEE)

Power Plant Pollution 101
Putting politics aside, there are a few basic facts you and I need to know about electricity. Like it or not, electricity production accounted for 33% of all greenhouse gas emission in 2011, putting it at the forefront of any pollution debate. Forget gas guzzlers and factory fumes: Electricity even beat out transportation’s 28% and industry’s 20%. More to the point, power plants in and of themselves are responsible for around 40% of all greenhouse gas pollution .

Source: whitehouse.gov

But as the president points out, all electricity production is not created equal. Throughout the 21-page document, the White House picks a series of energy source winners and losers. And for one dividend stock, its energy eggs are in all the right baskets.

Dividend-stock dynamite
NextEra Energy, Inc. (NYSE:NEE)
is the nation’s largest producer of renewable energy. Of its 18,122 MW of generating capacity spread across 24 states and four Canadian provinces, the utility owns just over 10,000 MW of wind capacity and is the largest owner of wind and utility-scale solar energy projects in North America.

Source: Nexteraenergyresources.com

NextEra Energy, Inc. (NYSE:NEE) has benefited tremendously from wind production tax credits and solar subsidies in the past, and many dividend stock investors are wondering whether NextEra Energy, Inc. (NYSE:NEE)’s luck is about to run out. But it seems that wind can still fill NextEra Energy, Inc. (NYSE:NEE)’s sails. A recent Congressional approval pushed wind power projections up 34% in the next three years, and the president seems more than happy to agree with Congress on this one.

As testimony to tax credits, the White House pats itself on the back for the doubling of wind production since 2009 and promises to do more. The president has set a goal of doubling renewable energy by 2020 and will work with the Department of Energy to accelerate clean energy permitting.

A move like that also bodes well for General Electric Company (NYSE:GE), a major provider of wind turbines. Just last month, the company revealed its latest and greatest 1.7 MW turbine model — and NextEra Energy, Inc. (NYSE:NEE) promptly snatched up 59 for a new wind farm. In its latest annual report, General Electric Company (NYSE:GE) cited increases in wind turbine sales as the primary reason for a 10% uptick in its Power & Water division sales.

While Atlantic Power Corp (NYSE:AT) has its own issues as a dividend stock, it, too, will benefit from Obama’s latest plans. The “growth by acquisition” corporation recently revealed big plans to head into renewables, and wind already accounts for almost one-fifth of its total capacity.

Source: Atlantic Power Deutsche Bank Leverage Financed Conference Presentation.

Can NextEra’s dividend grow?
NextEra’s dividend yield currently clocks in at 3.4%, a sizable 0.6 percentage points below the industry average. But that’s because the company has been pouring profits back into new projects, making the most of tax credits while they last.

Looking ahead, investors might not see major dividend yield growth in the next couple of years — but that’s because NextEra’s best value add is found in ramping up renewables. This dividend stock has earned its title, but it’s not sacrificing long-term shareholder value to tout the biggest yield around. If the president’s latest policies are any indicator, patient NextEra Energy, Inc. (NYSE:NEE) investors will continue to pull profits, dividend stock or not, for years to come.

The article Can Climate Change Propel This Dividend Stock? originally appeared on Fool.com and is written by Justin Loiseau.

Fool contributor Justin Loiseau owns shares of General Electric and uses electricity. You can follow him on Twitter, @TMFJLo, and on Motley Fool CAPS, @TMFJLo. The Motley Fool owns shares of General Electric.

Copyright © 1995 – 2013 The Motley Fool, LLC. All rights reserved. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.