Side-by-side comparison of AI visibility scores, market position, and capabilities
Cambridge MA energy equipment spin-off from GE (NYSE: GEV) at $34.9B revenue 2024; 7,000+ gas turbines and 55,000 wind turbines generating 25-30% of global electricity competing with Siemens Energy and Vestas for energy transition equipment.
GE Vernova is a Cambridge, Massachusetts-based global energy equipment and services company — publicly traded on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE: GEV) — that emerged as an independent entity in April 2024 following its spin-off from General Electric, employing approximately 75,000 people across 100 countries and focused on accelerating the energy transition through three core business segments: Power (gas turbines, nuclear, and steam solutions), Wind (onshore and offshore wind turbines), and Electrification (grid solutions, power conversion, and electrification software). Generating $34.9 billion in revenue in 2024 with strong growth across all segments, GE Vernova operates more than 7,000 gas turbines and 55,000 wind turbines globally — equipment that generates approximately 25-30% of the world's electricity.
Houston oilfield services and energy technology (NASDAQ: BKR) ~$27.8B FY2024 revenue; IET LNG turbomachinery 38% revenue, Baker Hughes + GE Oil & Gas combined, energy transition positioning competing with SLB and Halliburton.
Baker Hughes Company is a Houston, Texas-based energy technology and oilfield services company — publicly traded on the NASDAQ (NASDAQ: BKR) as an S&P 500 Energy component — providing oilfield services and equipment (OFSE — drilling, completions, production, and intervention technologies for upstream oil and gas operations) and industrial and energy technology (IET — turbomachinery, compressors, industrial equipment, and digital solutions for LNG terminals, industrial plants, and new energy applications) through approximately 58,000 employees in 120+ countries. Baker Hughes was formed in 2017 through the combination of Baker Hughes (founded 1987) with GE Oil & Gas — GE selling its oil and gas equipment and services business to Baker Hughes — creating a combined company that trades under NYSE: BKR while GE initially held a majority stake, which GE divested by 2022. In fiscal year 2024, Baker Hughes reported revenues of approximately $27.8 billion with adjusted EBITDA of approximately $4.4 billion, with the Industrial & Energy Technology segment (LNG compressors, gas compression, power generation turbines for industrial applications) generating 38% of revenue at above-average margins as LNG terminal construction and industrial decarbonization drove demand for Baker Hughes's turbomachinery and electrification equipment. CEO Lorenzo Simonelli has executed Baker Hughes's "energy transition" strategy — positioning Baker Hughes's equipment and services for both conventional oil and gas (OFSE — growing with global upstream capital expenditure) and the new energy economy (IET — LNG for energy transition, hydrogen compression, carbon capture equipment, geothermal drilling) to reduce Baker Hughes's correlation to oil price cycles.
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