CE
Clean Energy Fuels Corp. (CLNE)·Q1 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q1 2025 revenue was $103.8M, +0.1% YoY, and above S&P Global consensus of $100.8M; non-GAAP EPS was $0.01 vs consensus of $(0.20), a beat, while GAAP EPS was $(0.60) driven by non-cash goodwill impairment ($64.3M) and accelerated depreciation ($50.7M) tied to LNG station removal . Values marked with * are from S&P Global.
- Adjusted EBITDA rose to $17.1M (+33% YoY), supported by stronger fueling margins and prioritization of downstream RNG delivery despite supply constraints from cold weather; cash and short-term investments increased to $226.6M (+$9.1M QoQ) .
- Guidance update: 2025 GAAP net loss widened to $(225)–$(220)M (from prior $(160)–$(155)M) to reflect booked non-cash charges; 2025 Adjusted EBITDA maintained at $50–$55M .
- Operational catalysts: resumed share repurchases (~$26.1M remaining capacity), breadth of initial Cummins X15N adoption (25+ fleets), and potential tailwinds from AFTC reauthorization/45Z finalization; near-term volatility tied to policy outcomes (CARB LCFS, 45Z) and RNG supply normalization .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Adjusted EBITDA increased to $17.1M (vs $12.8M in Q1 2024), with positive operating cash flow and improved core fueling economics; management emphasized “a net increase in cash and investments” in the quarter .
- Management highlighted stable demand across refuse, transit and trucking, and reiterated confidence in RNG’s economics for heavy-duty trucking: “RNG is the commonsense solution… fleets can economically achieve significant emissions reductions” .
- Resumed share repurchases under the existing program (~$26.1M capacity as of March 31), reflecting confidence in valuation and balance sheet strength .
What Went Wrong
- RNG gallons sold fell 12.8% YoY to 50.6M due to cold-weather impacts on third-party supply (January–February), contributing to lower RIN revenue and volume pressure .
- GAAP net loss spiked to $(135.0)M, primarily from non-cash goodwill impairment ($64.3M) and accelerated depreciation ($50.7M) tied to the planned exit of LNG assets at 55 Pilot Flying J locations .
- AFTC expired on Dec 31, 2024, removing $5.4M of revenue YoY; RIN revenue declined by $3.6M on lower prices/volumes/share of RIN values, partially offset by LCFS timing (+$4.0M) .
Financial Results
Core P&L vs Prior Periods
YoY Comparisons (Q1 2025 vs Q1 2024)
Fuel & Services KPIs (Volumes)
Sources of Revenue (Detail)
Consensus vs Actuals (S&P Global)
Values marked with * are from S&P Global.
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “Our first quarter operating results, apart from the non-cash charges, resulted in a net increase in cash and investments… accommodating the adoption of the Cummins X15N engine… while also increasing RNG volumes from our dairy RNG projects” — Andrew J. Littlefair .
- “These 2 non-cash items combined amounted to $115M of our GAAP loss of $135M… adjusted EBITDA… $17.1M vs $12.8M a year ago” — CFO Robert Vreeland .
- “Tariffs have minimal direct impact on our business… our RNG is produced, transported and delivered to customers here in the U.S.” — Andrew J. Littlefair .
- “We reinstated [buybacks] with ~$26M available… programmatically done” — CFO Robert Vreeland .
Q&A Highlights
- Guidance sensitivities: Upside from 45Z finalization and RNG Incentive Act; downside risk from tariff-related heavy-duty truck purchase delays; management remains “cautiously optimistic” .
- Pricing/margins: Healthy oil-to-gas spread and strong core fueling margins expected to persist; revenue steady without AFTC .
- X15N economics: Incremental truck cost targeted down to ~$75–80k to enable ~2–2.5-year payback; Freightliner’s lower price point helps adoption breadth .
- Upstream RNG: Six operating dairy projects ramping; provisional LCFS pathways pending; upstream EBITDA expected to turn positive on select dairies into 2026 .
- Capital allocation: 2025 CapEx ~$30M (stations) and ~$104M (upstream), with ~60% of upstream as JV contributions; prudent stance on greenfield M&A .
Estimates Context
- Q1 2025 beats: Revenue $103.8M vs $100.8M consensus*; Primary EPS $0.01 vs $(0.195) consensus* .
- Prior quarters: Q4 2024 revenue $109.3M vs $102.6M consensus*; Primary EPS $0.02 vs $0.00 consensus* .
- Estimate coverage: 6 revenue estimates and 4 EPS estimates for Q1 2025*; target price consensus ~$4.71 across 7 estimates*.
- Implication: Consensus models likely need to reflect stronger core fueling margins and non-GAAP profitability offsetting environmental credit cadence and AFTC lapse; GAAP loss remains heavily non-cash.
Values marked with * are from S&P Global.
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Non-GAAP execution solid: Adjusted EBITDA +33% YoY and non-GAAP EPS positive despite RNG supply headwinds and absence of AFTC; focus on downstream margin resilience .
- GAAP optics dominated by non-cash charges: Goodwill impairment and accelerated depreciation drove $(0.60) GAAP EPS; these do not reflect core cash generation, but widened 2025 GAAP loss guidance .
- Adoption breadth over size: Early X15N penetration strategy prioritizes dozens of fleets and improved TCO via lower incremental cost—setting up 2026–2027 volume inflection .
- Policy swing factors: Reinstatement of AFTC and final 45Z design could materially enhance 2025–2026 earnings power; CARB LCFS pathway/pricing normalization supports credit revenues .
- Supply normalization likely: Weather-driven RNG constraints in Q1 should ease, with allocation optimization favoring stations and O&M customers; watch RIN price trajectory vs LCFS strength .
- Balance sheet optionality: $226.6M cash/ST investments and resumed buybacks provide capital flexibility for growth and shareholder returns .
- Trading setup: Near-term stock narrative tied to policy clarity (LCFS, 45Z), breadth of X15N orders (Freightliner ramp), and continued non-GAAP beats vs consensus—offset by GAAP headline noise from non-cash charges .