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TPI Composites, Inc. (TPIC 1.00%)
Q4 2020 Earnings Call
Feb 25, 2021, 5:00 p.m. ET

Contents:

  • Prepared Remarks
  • Questions and Answers
  • Call Participants

Prepared Remarks:

Operator

Good afternoon, and welcome to TPI Composites' Fourth Quarter and Full Year 2020 Earnings Conference Call. Today's call is being recorded, and we have allocated one hour for prepared remarks and Q&A.

At this time, I'd like to turn the conference over to Christian Edin, Investor Relations for TPI Composites. Thank you. You may begin.

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Christian Edin -- Investor Relations

Thank you, operator. I'd like to welcome everyone to TPI Composites' Fourth Quarter and Full Year 2020 Earnings Call. We will be making forward-looking statements during this call based on current expectations and assumptions, which are subject to risks and uncertainties. Actual results could differ materially from our forward look statements if any of our key assumptions are incorrect because of other factors discussed in today's earnings news release and the comments made during this conference call or in our annual report on Form 10-K filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission, or in our latest reports and filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, each of which can be found on our website, tpicomposites.com. We do not undertake any duty to update any forward-looking statements.

Today's presentation also includes references to non-GAAP financial measures. You should refer to the information contained in the slides accompanying today's presentation for definitional information and reconciliations of historical non-GAAP measures to the comparable GAAP financial measures.

With that, let me turn the call over to Bill Siwek, TPI Composites' President and CEO.

William E. Siwek -- President, Chief Executive Officer and Director

Thanks, Christian, and good afternoon, everyone. Thank you for joining our call. In addition to Christian, I'm joined today by Bryan Schumaker, our CFO. I'll briefly review our full year results and activities, discuss the current operational status of our manufacturing facilities, including our supply chain, give an update on our global service and transportation businesses, and then a quick update on the wind energy market. Bryan will then review our quarterly and full year financial results in detail, our 2021 guidance. And then we will open up the call for Q&A.

Please turn to slide five. We finished 2020 strong with 27% growth in adjusted EBITDA in the fourth quarter, while expanding this margin by 120 basis points year-over-year to 8.8%. For the full year 2020 with the backdrop of a difficult operating environment due to COVID-19, we achieved double-digit revenue and adjusted EBITDA growth. We delivered net sales of $1.67 billion, a 16.3% increase over 2019, and adjusted EBITDA of $94.5 million or 5.7% of net sales, notwithstanding the estimated impact of COVID-19 on adjusted EBITDA during the year of just over $60 million. These results speak to our business model and our team's ability to adapt and stay nimble in a dynamic macro landscape. We delivered approximately 12 gigawatts of wind blades during 2020. We started wind blade production in India for Vestas and added Nordex as a customer in India as well with production starting for them this quarter. We extended contracts with GE and Vestas, and in the fourth quarter we extended a contract with Nordex in Turkey. We continued to make progress in transportation, including hitting key milestones under the super truck two program with Navistar, production of commercial delivery vehicles for Workhorse. And we're now producing components for multiple passenger EV platforms under technology development and pilot production arrangements.

We continue to refresh our Board of Directors by adding global operations and finance experience, independence and diversity. We published our first ESG report last March and plan to publish our second annual report this March. We remain committed to operating our business safely while continuing to mitigate the impacts of COVID-19 and ensuring that we are prepared to deal with the resurgence of the virus in any of our global locations. We have and we'll continue to adapt our operating procedures in order to enable our associates to work safely and continue to meet our customers' demands. We also continue to drive the operational imperatives we outlined in 2020 and recommitted to in 2021 to reduce cost and improve our operations globally. We are making very good progress on these imperatives, notwithstanding the challenges created by COVID-19.

Turning to slide six. I'll now give you a quick update of our global operations as well as a market update. During the fourth quarter, we continued to operate all of our facilities at normal levels. In China, we delivered more volume than our original 2020 plan, demonstrating what an outstanding group of associates we have there. However, at the start of 2021, five lines were removed from production, and we expect the remaining lines will run at lower utilization during 2021, and therefore our volumes will be down year-over-year in China. We will continue to explore opportunities for that capacity, including Chinese OEMs, but the shifting of capacity from geography to geography over time is consistent with our strategy to manage risk and optimize our footprint to enable the highest utilization and competitive advantage for TPI and our customers.

In India, we ramped up the first four lines of the facility for Vestas, and we are starting production on two lines for Nordex as we speak. The Vestas ramp went remarkably well, even though we were in the middle of a pandemic. In Turkey, production continued as normal, while we started the transition of three lines during the fourth quarter. That transition is continuing into the first quarter of 2021. In Mexico, production also continued at normal levels. We are currently in the midst of a transition of two lines in Matamoros as well as one line in Juarez. And we plan on having as many as seven more lines in transition in Mexico during 2021. In the U.S., blade and transportation production has continued uninterrupted. On the service side of the business, we made very nice progress in 2020, securing new deals with OEMs as well as asset owners, and are working hard to build out our global service team to execute our growth strategy in 2021 and beyond. To accelerate our growth and to deal with the shortage of qualified technicians, we opened a new training center in Santa Teresa, New Mexico to increase our training capabilities and support our rapidly growing need for qualified blade service technicians. We are also continuing to evaluate blade recycling options and look forward to being able to share more on this effort during 2021 as some significant progress was made during 2020. The global transportation industry is working to rapidly increase the electrification of vehicles to reduce the impact on the environment.

According to BloombergNEF, electric bus sales are anticipated to grow almost threefold in the U.S. from 2021 to 2025. The sales of commercial electric vehicles are expected to grow into the hundreds of thousands by 2030 as e-commerce continues to rapidly rise and consumers are driving demand higher for passenger electric vehicles. We expect there will be an increased demand for composite components and structures for electric vehicles, as composite material systems can be the key material building blocks for purpose-built vehicles. Our composite solutions are ideally suited for transportation applications because of the benefits resulting from weight reduction and therefore extended range for EVs, corrosion resistance, strength, durability, the ability to scale production with lower upfront production investment, and lower total cost of ownership for end users. The level of interest in our capabilities continues to grow. We are collaborating with our customers to develop innovative composite solutions for vehicles across passenger automotive, bus, truck and delivery vehicles.

Today, we are building composite bodies for buses and delivery vehicles, collaborating on Class eight vehicle programs and manufacturing components for multiple passenger EV platforms. Since 2018, we have invested approximately $50 million in our transportation business, and we expect to invest upwards of $20 million more in 2021 to continue to build our team, technology and infrastructure to capitalize on the accelerating EV and lightweighting trends. With respect to our supply chain, we did not experience any significant supply issues during the fourth quarter.

We continue to monitor the material markets closely. There are still some logistics challenges. For example, there is congestion at Los Angeles area ports that we're working through, but nothing that has materially impacted our production thus far. We will continue to diversify our supply chain geographically to reduce risk, provide for security of key materials, and drive down cost.

Turning to slide seven. We expect the long-term trend for wind energy to continue to strengthen based on the current cost of wind energy, continued efforts to drive down cost, and strengthening of political will around the world to decarbonize and reverse climate change. Since our last call, the production tax credit in the U.S. was extended through the end of 2021. And we believe that the tone the Biden administration is setting on climate change bodes very well for renewables over the coming years. In the last month for example, President Biden committed to rejoin the Paris climate agreement, announced up to $100 million in funding for transformative clean energy technology research and development via the Advanced Research Projects Agency, and announced several executive orders to promote renewable energy. A climate task force was created to set in motion a governmentwide action plan for reducing emissions, directing all federal agencies to consider climate in their decision-making, driving federal procurement to renewable energy, targeting federal lands and water for clean energy development, and accelerating the permitting of clean energy and transmission projects.

As you can see on slide seven, Wood Mackenzie's onshore and offshore forecast continued to strengthen both globally and in the U.S. In addition, we have layered in two scenarios to illustrate the potential of the accelerating energy transition. On the global chart, BloombergNEF's climate scenario shows what global wind installations would collectively need to be to meet a well below 2-degree scenario. As you can see, it's substantial. On the U.S. chart, these are the wind installations needed to enable the U.S. to reach 50% renewable electricity by 2030. This scenario, created by Wood Mackenzie and the American Clean Power Association, demonstrates how the U.S. wind market can strengthen over time and be a critical factor in reducing U.S. emissions and creating a stronger economy. One of the key findings from the Wood Mac and ACP work is that administrative actions alone can potentially double renewable energy penetration within the next decade with transmission-focused policies to unlock renewables' potential. While it is still the early days in the Biden administration, this scenario shows the strong growth potential of the U.S. wind market over the coming years.

In Europe, the support for the European Green Deal is strengthening. And European leaders are working to finalize the strengthened plan to cut emissions beyond the original target in the European Green Deal to 55% by 2030 compared to 1990 levels. We believe recent global initiatives to promote wind and renewable energy elsewhere will also fuel long-term renewables growth, including the announcement of net zero targets from China in 2060, Japan, South Korea and Canada all 2050; and of course Power to the X for the creation of synthetic fuels for use in heating, transportation and power generation by producing green hydrogen through the electrolysis of water using renewable energy.

These are a few examples of the accelerating energy transition we are seeing on a global basis, with additional drivers included on slide eight. We believe the future for wind energy will continue to strengthen, given the initiatives and goals to promote the acceleration of the energy transition. Our long-term goals that we have discussed publicly, including 18 gigawatts capacity, 20% market share and $2 billion of wind revenue have not yet been updated to reflect the potential impact of the acceleration of the energy transition. As we discussed on the last call, we are working with our customers, developers, utilities, and asset owners to estimate the magnitude and timing of demand, both on and offshore, to make sure we are aligned geographically with the capacity of each of our customers' needs over the next decade. While we are not ready to present updated numbers today, we believe the long-term opportunity for us in wind is significant, and we will update our targets when we have better clarity.

Finally, while the health and safety of our associates remains our primary objective, we remain focused on our operating imperatives and our ESG activities to drive profitable growth and long-term shareholder value.

With that, let me turn the call over to Bryan.

Bryan Schumaker -- Chief Financial Officer

Thanks, Bill. Please turn to slide 11. All comparisons made today will be on a year-over-year basis compared to the same period in 2019. For the fourth quarter ended December 31, 2020, net sales increased by $43.5 million or 10.3% to $465.6 million. Net sales of wind blades increased by 12% to $445.5 million. This was primarily driven by an 8% increase in average selling price per set due to the mix of wind blades produced and a 4% increase in the number of wind blades produced year-over-year. Start-up and transition costs for the quarter increased by $8.2 million to $13.1 million as we continued to ramp up our India facility and transition lines to bigger blades in Turkey and Mexico. Our general and administrative expenses for the quarter decreased by $4.30 million to $7.8 million. G&A as a percentage of net sales decreased 120 basis points to 1.7% of net sales. This decrease was primarily related to the decrease in travel and training costs due to COVID-19 during the quarter.

Before share-based compensation, G&A as a percentage of net sales was 1.4% and 2.6% in Q4 2020 and 2019 respectively. During the quarter, we incurred $3.7 million of restructuring charges associated with the reduction of five lines under contract in our defunct China facility. Net income for the quarter was $5.2 million as compared to a net loss of $0.9 million in the same period in 2019. This increase was primarily due to the reasons previously described.

In addition, we estimate that net income was adversely impacted by approximately $5 million associated with the production volume lost under noncancelable purchase orders due to the reduced production, along with other costs primarily related to the health and safety of our associates and nonproductive labor associated with COVID-19. Net income per diluted share was $0.14 for the quarter compared to a net loss of $0.02 per share for the same period in 2019. Our adjusted EBITDA for Q4 was $40.8 million. Our adjusted EBITDA margin was 8.8% and our utilization was 92% for lines under contract at quarter end. This compares to adjusted EBITDA of $32 million, an adjusted EBITDA margin of 7.6% and utilization of 96% in the same period in 2019. We estimate that adjusted EBITDA was negatively impacted by approximately $5 million associated with production volume lost along with other costs related to COVID-19 that impacted our production facilities.

Turning to slide 12. For the year ended December 31, 2020, net sales increased 16.3% or $233.6 million to nearly $1.7 billion. Net sales of wind blades increased 18.9% to $1.6 billion despite the impact that COVID-19 had on our manufacturing facilities. The increase in wind blade sales was driven by an 11% increase in wind blade sets produced and a 26% increase in estimated megawatts produced. Net sales from transportation increased 25.4% to $36.2 million. We achieved a 10.1% increase in adjusted EBITDA to $94.5 million, despite being significantly impacted by COVID-19. Globally, our associates did a great job of pulling together and managing through the pandemic, while ensuring their health and safety.

Moving on to slide 13. We ended the quarter with $129.9 million in cash and cash equivalents and total principal amount of debt outstanding of $218 million, in a year where we were significantly impacted by COVID-19 and invested $65.7 million in capital expenditures to grow the business. We held our net debt to under $89 million. And we were able to get our net leverage ratio, as calculated under our senior revolving loan facility, back down to under 1.8 times by December 31, 2020.

Turning to slide 14, 2021 full year guidance. For 2021 we are guiding to net sales of between $1.7 billion to $1.85 billion, adjusted EBITDA of between $110 million to $135 million. We will discuss this in more detail on the following slide. Dedicated manufacturing lines during the year are expected to be approximately 50. Utilization of between 80% to 85%. Total wind blade set capacity of 4,090. Average selling price per blade of between $160,000 and $165,000. Nonblade sales of between $100 million and $125 million. Capital expenditures of between $55 million and $65 million. Start-up costs of between $8 million and $11 million, with most of it occurring in the first half of the year. And we expect restructuring costs of approximately $10 million associated with the optimization of our global footprint. Approximately 50% of those costs is expected to be noncash.

On slide 15, we provided a walk from our 2020 adjusted EBITDA to the midpoint of our adjusted EBITDA guidance range for 2021. Our adjusted EBITDA guidance includes approximately $10 million of costs related to the health and safety of our associates as we continue to manage through COVID-19. The overall cost of COVID-19 is expected to be substantially less than in 2020.

Next, you can see the results of our relentless focus on operational execution to drive down the cost of raw materials, decrease cycle time, decrease waste and continue to drive other costs out of the system. As Bill previously mentioned, we have taken five lines out of production in China, and we are expecting the other 10 lines to be operating at a lower utilization during the back half of the year.

We are also forecasting lower utilization in Q4 for several of our lines in other regions. Our forecast of decreased utilization in the back half of the year is due primarily to what we believe is a short-term overcapacity issue with a few of our customers, as well as certain of our customers shifting production away from China to mitigate geopolitical risk and increasing costs associated with doing business in China. With the continued momentum in the EV space, we are forecasting that we will invest approximately $15 million to $20 million in the transportation business during 2021 as we continue to hire and develop our team, technology and infrastructure.

Finally, we continue to make progress with the speed of our start-ups and transitions. Although we are forecasting our total start-ups cost to be down year-over-year, we do expect to have more transitions this year than we did in 2020. This bar represents both the start-up and transition costs in our P&L and the margin impact associated with transitioning to a bigger blade. Although we are not providing quarterly guidance, we believe that our Q1 adjusted EBITDA will be less than $10 million due to seasonality and the number of lines that we have in transition and start-up.

With that, I will turn it back over to Bill to wrap up. And then we will take your questions. Bill?

William E. Siwek -- President, Chief Executive Officer and Director

Thanks, Bryan. Turning to slide 17. The health and safety of our associates and their families as well as the communities in which they live remain our #1 priority. We continue to take the necessary steps on the COVID-19 front to ensure the safety of our associates and safe working conditions in our facilities. We continue to aggressively work our wind pipeline, and we remain very encouraged by the progress we continue to make in the service space. We are continuing to build on our momentum in the transportation space, and we'll continue to refine our long-term strategy to capitalize on the increased interest investment and activity in the electric vehicle space. We continue to remain focused on managing our liquidity to provide financial security and flexibility as we drive through the current environment and execute our strategy to capitalize on the acceleration of the energy transition.

Our overall mission to decarbonize and electrify remains unchanged. We will continue to optimize our global footprint, while using the leverage our global scale provides for operating and supply chain efficiencies to continue to drive down cost, all while maintaining a strong balance sheet. We will continue to evaluate the global demand and update our long-term targets accordingly to better reflect the long-term opportunity we expect to see in wind and EVs under this accelerated energy transition. I want to thank all of our dedicated TPI associates for their commitment and dedication and for their extraordinary efforts during 2020 to deliver on our commitments to our customers in the middle of a global pandemic. Thank you again for your time today.

And with that, operator, please open the line for questions.

Questions and Answers:

Operator

[Operator Instructions] And the first question comes from Philip Shen with ROTH Capital Partners.

Donovan Schafe -- ROTH Capital Partners -- Analyst

This is Donovan Schafe on for Philip. I have a couple of questions for you. The first one is on the -- I was impressed with the guidance to see that there's a pretty big uptick in the ASPs. And I'm sort of trying to think about how to think about that, or how to model that as a trade-off with volumes. Because there's -- you're moving to larger blades, but then as you guys show on slide 15, there's going to be a negative impact from volumes. That's a great bridge that you guys are providing. Is it accurate to think of like the increase -- you had the increase in transition costs, start-up costs, but some of the result of that is those higher ASPs, that pretty significant jump that we're seeing? And is that what is -- is that kind of -- like if you held revenue [Technical Issues] and decreased volume but perfectly offset it by the ASP uptick, is that generally going to be pushing the margins up? And should we be seeing that kind of phenomenon going forward?

William E. Siwek -- President, Chief Executive Officer and Director

Yes. Thanks, Donovan, for the question, by the way. ASPs increasing, we've seen that year-over-year, and that's really all about bigger blades, right? So longer blades, heavier blades generally equates to higher ASPs. So that's why you're seeing that ASP growth. And we've talked a bit about this before where over time, that's kind of why we went away a little bit from talking strictly about lines and talking more about gigawatts or megawatts of capacity. Because over time, the number of lines may stay steady or actually reduce but our megawatts of production may actually go up. As long as we continue to maintain the throughput, the way we do and drive cycle time, if we're driving the same number of large blades through the same capex investment that we were doing on the smaller blades, then you're going to see a revenue uptick for sure. And over time, as you -- as those blades mature, you should see a margin uptick as well. But it takes a little time to get through the transition and get to serial production. But once you do, you should see an uptick in margins as well.

Donovan Schafe -- ROTH Capital Partners -- Analyst

Okay, great. And then my second question is Vestas has been having some -- there have been some headline blade issues. And there are some lightning strikes. And then they had the issue with the inserts and so forth. And so I'm just curious because I think in the last -- in Q3 in your Q filing, it showed Vestas was something like 50%, approximately 50% of revenues for the trailing nine months. Have you heard or seen anything from them or kind of any indications on the horizon of any type of slowdown coming from Vestas?

William E. Siwek -- President, Chief Executive Officer and Director

Yes. So on the blade issue, I think they were pretty clear that, that was a sub-supplier. It was a component that we clearly use in the blade, but it's not a TPI issue as it relates to that. We're still -- Vestas will continue to be our largest customer. We will see a little bit of variation in their utilization at the back half of this year initially, although initial indications are showing that '22 looks very strong starting right out of the gate at the beginning of the year. So as we said, it looks like it's a temporary utilization challenge in the back half of the year, primarily the fourth quarter. Some of it was a little bit of pull ahead, I think, of build from 2020. But overall still, we're going to be producing a whole bunch of blades for Vestas. They'll remain our largest customer. And we're continuing to work with them on optimizing our footprint, for not only our success but theirs as well.

Donovan Schafe -- ROTH Capital Partners -- Analyst

Okay. Great. Well, congratulations on the quarter.

Operator

And the next question will be from Paul Coster with JPMorgan.

Paul Coster -- JPMorgan -- Analyst

So China, perhaps you can tell us what happens to the facility and operations in China as the utilization rate falls? Do you idle it? Or what's the process there?

William E. Siwek -- President, Chief Executive Officer and Director

Paul, this is Bill. Thanks for the question. Yes, we're working on a number of options there, Paul. We have two blade facilities and a tooling facility. So -- and the blade facility we built in Yangzhou is state of the art. Our other facility, although still performing extremely well, is kind of getting to its functional end of life just because the blade sizes have gotten so large. And so we will look at consolidating in China a little bit more than we have. We are looking at some other options for our older facility. But likely it's a consolidation of the operations to reduce the footprint a bit and become a little bit more efficient and cost-effective out of China.

Paul Coster -- JPMorgan -- Analyst

And the business that shifted from China to elsewhere, that there was capacity available to absorb that? You didn't need to build any new facilities or capacity?

William E. Siwek -- President, Chief Executive Officer and Director

Yes. I mean if you think about it, it's possible that some of the capacity we built in India will supplement or will replace what was in China. Again, if that volume is going to the U.S., the tariff doesn't exist between India and the U.S., but it does between China. The cost of manufacturing in India is significantly less than in China as well. So we've talked about looking at globalizing and localizing and derisking supply chain. That's part of what we've done, and that's part of what our customers are doing too. So we did add capacity in India clearly and that could be some of the capacity coming out of China.

Paul Coster -- JPMorgan -- Analyst

When I look at the EBITDA walk on Page 15, which I agree is very helpful by the way, and I look at the demand impact orange bar, is that all China? Is it the combination of China in the second half as sort of lower utilization rate? How do I think about that $50 million-plus, $60 million decrement?

William E. Siwek -- President, Chief Executive Officer and Director

Yes. It's not just China, Paul. There are clearly -- there's some of that in China. But we've got in a couple of other regions some fourth quarter utilization reductions. Some of those will be used for transitions quite frankly. We're still in the planning phase with some of our customers on what we -- what exactly they want going into '22 in a couple of different locations. So it's not strictly China, there's a little bit of volume degradation in a couple of other regions as well.

Paul Coster -- JPMorgan -- Analyst

Okay, final question. As you start up the transportation business, is it going to be more decentralized and co-located, or closer located to this end customer and smaller scale? Or is it likely to follow the same pattern as wind, very centralized facilities?

William E. Siwek -- President, Chief Executive Officer and Director

No. I think it will depend a little bit, Paul. But our plan would be depending on what we're actually doing whether we're doing a full-body or if we're doing subcomponents, we're -- quite frankly and even in the case of cabs, we've talked both models where we could be centrally located for certain things and then co-located for others. So I think it will be a little bit of a mixed model. It will be different than the blade model. There will be much more co-location as it relates to the different OEMs that we're working with. I think eliminating the transportation between a central location and another location is clearly part of the goal. And so co-location is more likely.

Operator

The next question comes from Chris Tsung with Webber Research.

Chris Tsung -- Webber Research -- Analyst

So I'm on for Greg, and we just have a couple of questions. I wanted to just touch on the transportation pipeline. Like I think we noted two of your customers recently announced a cooperation on hydrogen vehicles. And could TPIC eventually be a part of that project? And I'm just trying to see how we should think about that pipeline developing.

William E. Siwek -- President, Chief Executive Officer and Director

So we are working on a number of projects as we said in our prepared remarks, a couple of the development projects in the Class eight space. Whether those are ultimately fuel cell or battery could be either/or. So again then we're in the delivery vehicle space as you know, working collaboratively with Workhorse on their last-mile delivery. And then a couple of passenger automotive EV programs that we can't discuss who they're with, but those are more subcomponents. So yes our plan is to, much like we do with the blade OEMs, is to collaborate as deeply with those parties as they would like us to. The more collaboration, generally the more value you can add, and the better the end product. So that's our mode going in is to collaborate deeply with these guys, figure out what the best solution is for the problem they're trying to solve. And then -- and that's what our value proposition is. So collaboration is important for us in this space. We don't want to just be a commodity -- a provider of commodity parts. That's not what our model is.

Chris Tsung -- Webber Research -- Analyst

All right, yes, great. I guess it's a good segue into Workhorse. You see the recent news regarding Workhorse and the USPS deal. How much of the 500 million in transportation revenue that you guys have for the next three to five years is dependent on that deal? Like I guess put it another way, how much of it of the Workhorse and USPS deal is baked into that $500 million? And do you see that time line sliding out a little bit further?

William E. Siwek -- President, Chief Executive Officer and Director

Yes. So we set our 500 million target before Workhorse was even a customer at the time. So there was 0 from USPS baked into that number. That would have been an upside opportunity for us. Clearly in our long-term plans, we do have last-mile delivery in our transportation plans. But as far as the USPS and the $500,000, there was nothing for USPS in the $500 million.

Operator

The next question will come from Eric Stine with Craig-Hallum.

Eric Stine -- Craig-Hallum -- Analyst

So can we just go back to China a little bit? As I think about on the one hand, you'll be down to 50 lines from I believe 53 at the end of the year. But then also your commentary seems quite bullish about 2022. Should we think about that as due to you're kind of in the interim where you're trying to figure out what your OEM partners want to do? And maybe just what are some of the discussions happening around as those OEMs try to get away from China or reduce China exposure? What that's looking like in other locations?

William E. Siwek -- President, Chief Executive Officer and Director

Yes. Again just to be clear, I don't -- it's not like they're running for the hills. I mean they're just -- they're rebalancing where their capacity is to make sure that it's efficient and to derisk for any potential issues in the future. So again they're not running for the hills by any stretch, but they are derisking. And we think that's a smart thing to do. So it's a -- Eric, I almost equate it a little bit to the calm before the storm. I mean there's a lot going on in the energy world right now. Everybody is trying to figure out what the EU Green Deal means, what's it going to mean for western OEMs with China's goals for decarbonization. We have a new administration in the U.S. Clearly, everything is going to be looked at through the lens of climate change, but what exactly does that mean?

So I think 2021, there's a lot of trying to figure out exactly what's going to happen. It's not if, it's when. And so I think that's why there's a little bit of pause throughout stretches of the year. But with all that said, we're still growing our top line 10%. We're still growing EBITDA by 30%. This is in a year where we've got utilization that's down a little bit, lower than we would like it to be. So again I see it as a year of transition and don't think of transition as the way we think of a transition. But it's a year of transition in the space, right, and people trying to figure out what all of this very positive potential, whether it's legislation, regulation or just demands of the consumer and decarbonization mean and how that gets implemented into the bigger picture long term.

Eric Stine -- Craig-Hallum -- Analyst

Right. So I mean I guess to put another way, your -- you said near term there's still some uncertainty as to what that looks like. But clearly constructive conversations and relationships you've got with those OEMs are leading to that pretty bullish outlook for 2022?

William E. Siwek -- President, Chief Executive Officer and Director

That's correct, absolutely.

Eric Stine -- Craig-Hallum -- Analyst

Okay, all right. And maybe just last one just sticking with China. I know you mentioned that you were looking to some maybe work for some Chinese OEMs. And I know historically that's been really not available because that -- they've mostly in-sourced production. So have you seen any changes in the market? Or just what are your thoughts about potentially replacing some of that business with some players in China?

William E. Siwek -- President, Chief Executive Officer and Director

We've always been in discussion, and it's a -- it has been a challenge just making sure that we get to the right financial terms that make sense for us. And we're not going to compromise financially to do that. But it is changing. We've had opportunities with them outside of China as well, which doesn't mean you can't build for them inside of China and export. So again, we're going to continue to work those relationships, continue to look at the opportunities. There is significant demand in China for wind over the next several years. The numbers this year were staggering. I'm not quite sure how to take them, but the numbers are staggering. And so is there enough capacity in China to satisfy the demand from the OEMs? And we think there's an opportunity there for us to play. There's also an opportunity for the western OEMs to gain share there, especially as large as that market is. So we'll continue to work with them on opportunities there as well.

Operator

And the next question will be from Laura Sanchez with Morgan Stanley.

Laura Sanchez -- Morgan Stanley -- Analyst

I was wondering if you could comment on the impact to margins from moving those lines out of China. Are costs in India and other locations similar, so that in net it wouldn't have an impact on margins? Or how should we think about that?

Bryan Schumaker -- Chief Financial Officer

Yes. I mean overall if you look at it, there is an impact right now in the short term, basically due to going from a mature plant to one of the new plants. But over the long term, we believe we'll recover those margins as the lines mature in these other regions. So that's why I mean as Bill kind of spoke to as we get the utilization up, hopefully in 2022 as we're seeing, that's where we see some improvement in the margins, with that shift from kind of the smaller blades to the bigger blades with additional margin.

Laura Sanchez -- Morgan Stanley -- Analyst

Got it. So is the 12% EBITDA margin goal still on the table?

Bryan Schumaker -- Chief Financial Officer

Yes. I think if you look kind of at this bridge and kind of do the math, you can see some different areas of where you can get that and figure out how to achieve those 12% margins. So yes, we're not adjusting that at this time.

Laura Sanchez -- Morgan Stanley -- Analyst

Okay, OK, and one more for me. So going back to commentary on Vestas, they posted some margin pressure in the fourth quarter. So I was wondering if you could comment on your conversations with customers in regards to pricing dynamics. Are you seeing any pressure these days? And how is your ability to negotiate with them in terms of translation -- timing of concessions?

William E. Siwek -- President, Chief Executive Officer and Director

Yes. So Laura, we've seen pressure on margins for a long time, and I think we always will, right? That's just the nature of it. But with the nature or with the structure of our contract, we're able to be pretty successful in maintaining the margins or even increasing margins over time, just based on the structure of our contracts. So I think if you look in the -- for our OEM customers, they have seen stabilized pricing probably over the last six to eight quarters now. So that has helped quite a bit. But we're going to continue to try to drive cost and drive LCOE down. We'll continue to have pressure from our customers, and we'll continue to pressure our customers to work with us to drive the cost. So I think it's a healthy -- there's healthy -- I guess there's healthy stress in that kind of that relationship where we're pushing them. They're pushing us and together we push costs down, and that benefits both of us. So I don't think that dynamic will change.

Laura Sanchez -- Morgan Stanley -- Analyst

Okay. Okay, perfect. Last one, you had comment -- you had said before that for transportation business, you could see double-digit margins. Are you seeing those levels these days? Based on kind of conversations or looking at the numbers of some auto companies, that seems a bit high for the auto industry. So how should we think about the competitive dynamics there?

William E. Siwek -- President, Chief Executive Officer and Director

Yes, I think we're not seeing double digits today, Laura. Obviously, we're investing in that business. We're investing from a development standpoint. Some of the development agreements we have are not meant to be significant margin projects. But we do -- as we've looked at modeling, as we've looked at volumes, as we looked at what our costs are and what the ask has been from the customers we've been working with, we think we can get there quite frankly. So again, we're not -- it's not like we're an auto OEM or a supplier or a sub-supplier, a little bit different dynamic. But based on what we've modeled to date on some of the projects we've looked at, we do believe that that's attainable. But again, it's still early days on that. And again, more as we get further down the path with production contracts.

Operator

The next question will be from Graham Price with Raymond James.

Graham Price -- Raymond James -- Analyst

This is Graham Price on for Pavel Molchanov. I guess just kind of a broad question on the transportation side. I was wondering if you could speak to the road map for reaching your $500 million long-term revenue target? And also if any recent developments might lead you to believe that, that could be conservative at this point?

William E. Siwek -- President, Chief Executive Officer and Director

Yes. I think the road map is -- it's going to take time to get there. We've focused -- we've kind of -- we've spent some time over the last four to six months to refine our strategy. And we're kind of looking -- we're looking at the cab space, which is Class eight cab structures as well as cabs for that last-mile delivery. We look at battery enclosure. If you think about -- that's a key component of any EV as well as in subcomponents for an EV. So all the way from a full-body structure to a subcomponent. And we've got development agreements in each of those segments that we're working on right now with customers. And so again, it's a -- $500 million is over time, over several years. Any one development program could take a significant chunk out of that. So we're continuing to work those programs diligently, educating the market as to what the benefits of composites are, and educating them to what the cost of composites can be in volume, that it's not cost-prohibitive. And we're looking at a lot of and developing a lot of innovative technology around that. So again the road map, we haven't put a public road map out there obviously, but we have an internal road map that gets us there over time. And so we're going to continue to focus on execute and keep our heads down and win some projects. So that's as much as I can give you on the road map.

Graham Price -- Raymond James -- Analyst

Got it. And then I guess quickly for my follow-up, the 2021 guidance for $100 million to $125 million for the nonblade sales next year, I was just wondering if I could get some color on what the breakout is for that portion?

Bryan Schumaker -- Chief Financial Officer

Yes. I mean if you look at kind of the ratio we've had historically with the molds and some of those and then the other category with transportation, so it's probably about 1/3, 1/3, 1/3 actually when you look at it.

Graham Price -- Raymond James -- Analyst

Okay, perfect.

Bryan Schumaker -- Chief Financial Officer

So again, we're not -- you're forecasting a huge jump in transportation this next year. It will take time to get there, but we still see momentum behind it.

Operator

The next question is from Joseph Osha with JMP Securities.

Joseph Osha -- JMP Securities -- Analyst

Looking at that backlog chart that you showed on Page nine and then going back and looking to one from last quarter, subtract the revenue, it looks like you basically didn't have any bookings in the quarter. And A, am I kind of on track with that? B, could we be in an environment now, given the comments you're making about demand dislocations and stuff, where the visibility of the business declines for a while?

William E. Siwek -- President, Chief Executive Officer and Director

No. I think -- so we didn't add any new lines, Joe, but we did extend Nordex in Turkey. So we would have had a net add there. But we didn't add anything new to the pipeline, so you're right. It's interesting, Joe, because as -- when we were early on in this process, we were signing 5-year deals. So we have really -- the visibility was a little bit different. As we get -- as these deals get to their maturity and we are extending them, so you're extending them for one year or two years at a time. So by definition, you have a little bit less visibility from a longer-term perspective, but you might have better visibility in that 2- or 3-year window, if you will as to what we're actually going to do, yes. So I would say we still have very good visibility a year or two out. But as you extend contracts versus sign new contracts, it's for a shorter duration. So that's why it kind of -- you would think you might have less visibility, but from an operational standpoint, we actually have as good or better visibility when we're doing kind of 2-year extensions.

Joseph Osha -- JMP Securities -- Analyst

Okay. So I shouldn't overly focus on that $4.6 billion number and how that changes over time?

William E. Siwek -- President, Chief Executive Officer and Director

Yes, I would not. I mean that's clearly something that we've had out there for a long time. It's -- we are -- we have a lot of focus obviously on making sure we're extending contracts as well as signing new ones. And so we'd clearly like to see that grow, but that's not something that is driving exactly how we're working the business today.

Bryan Schumaker -- Chief Financial Officer

Yes, I would just add to that, I mean if you look at the overall pipeline and what we're seeing, I mean it's still what, plus over six gigawatts of kind of pipeline there. And so that hasn't changed kind of longer term.

Joseph Osha -- JMP Securities -- Analyst

That makes sense. And then just shifting gears a bit, obviously some broad comments about demand. But I mean there are some very different drivers here in the U.S. You've got some of these PTC shifts in China you alluded to just the kind of the crazy numbers. Is this just kind of a bunch of things aligning at the same time? Or is there some sort of broader global phenomenon here behind the reduced demand that I'm missing?

William E. Siwek -- President, Chief Executive Officer and Director

Behind the reduced demand? Again, I think....

Joseph Osha -- JMP Securities -- Analyst

Behind your cautious comments how the U.S....

William E. Siwek -- President, Chief Executive Officer and Director

I'm not sure I understand, Joe. Can you say that again?

Joseph Osha -- JMP Securities -- Analyst

Well, just again, you've talked about an environment where you were going to take lower utilization in China. And then you made some more cautious comments about the U.S. My point was just that those are very different things driving those two different markets. So I'm just trying to understand if there's some more unifying theme here, whether it's just that we happen to have some things going wrong in different markets for different reasons at the same time.

William E. Siwek -- President, Chief Executive Officer and Director

Yes, I think it's more -- it's not that demand is down, it's that there's more capacity, right? There's -- a couple of customers have probably some excess capacity today. And so it's trying to optimize that capacity going forward so that the utilization is much higher. And so it's not necessarily that demand is down, it's that demand for our -- demand for what we're building this next year is down a little bit, because of the overcapacity in the industry in key areas in key regions. Does that make sense? So it's not necessarily that gigawatts installed are going to go down, it's just from -- there's been enough capacity added, that the demand on our capacity is going to be a little bit less next year. We're only going to sell 126 less next year than we did this year. So it's not like it's a major drop, it's just -- it's -- right? So it's just -- it's less utilization than we would like. And we want -- we want to reoptimize our footprint so that we keep that utilization in the high 80s, low 90s as opposed to the low 80s.

Joseph Osha -- JMP Securities -- Analyst

And protect the margin. Yes, that makes sense.

William E. Siwek -- President, Chief Executive Officer and Director

And protect the margin, exactly right.

Joseph Osha -- JMP Securities -- Analyst

One final quick comment. I don't know if the question -- if you can comment on this or not. We were pretty excited about some of these city transit bus projects a year or two ago. And hearing less about that, can I assume that maybe we shouldn't be looking for some of those projects to really ramp at this point? Or just wondering if you can give me a little color about that.

William E. Siwek -- President, Chief Executive Officer and Director

On the transit bus stuff, I will tell you, you should probably talk directly to Proterra about that. Our volumes will actually be up for them in 2021 over 2020 by a fair amount. So our -- we're seeing good volume from them. And we're working closely with them on continuing to drive cost so they can be even more competitive than they already are.

Operator

The next question comes from Greg Lewis with BTIG.

Greg Lewis -- BTIG -- Analyst

I kind of had like a general question, like -- thank you for the guidance, super helpful. Is there any way to kind of balance or think through this is what utilization is, and this is what our margin is at this utilization. But if we can maybe squeeze whether it's 100 basis points or 200 basis points of incremental utilization, is there any way to think about like would that be additive to margins? Any way to kind of think about balancing cost absorption maybe with -- in a world where utilization maybe is a little bit better?

Bryan Schumaker -- Chief Financial Officer

Yes. I think -- I mean if you look at the last couple of quarters and what we've been able to produce, if you think about kind of the 8.8% margins we had this quarter with 92% utilization. And in prior quarter I mean we had 93% utilization and fairly robust margins there too. So I guess that kind of gives you an indication with 10.4% margin on those, and that was with the impact of COVID on the those quarters. So that kind of gives you an idea that 80% to 85% and then margin, that's if you don't do any other cost-out initiatives and drive cycle times and other things that we're continuing to work through. But the cost -- or if you just look at utilization alone, that's kind of the margins you can expect to see.

Greg Lewis -- BTIG -- Analyst

Okay. And then just realize we're running a little long here. Just as I think about -- and you touched on it [Technical Issues] as the transportation business goes forward, the numbers that we've heard the capex for 2021. Does any of that start to point to co-locations? Or is that really all just still for things that we're looking at that are pipe -- or kind of pilot projects at this point?

Bryan Schumaker -- Chief Financial Officer

Yes. At this point, that capex number, the $55 million to $65 million is primarily the transitions and start-up that we've already disclosed, and then some of the retooling and that combining some of the factories. I mean we have some on the transportation side, but not a significant amount that would drive kind of what you're thinking of kind of co-locating in that type of activities at this point in time.

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes our question-and-answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to Bill Siwek for any closing remarks.

William E. Siwek -- President, Chief Executive Officer and Director

Thank you again for your time today and for your interest in TPI. And please watch for our second annual ESG report, which we'll be releasing next month in March. Thanks, and we'll talk soon. Thank you.

Operator

[Operator Closing Remarks]

Duration: 56 minutes

Call participants:

Christian Edin -- Investor Relations

William E. Siwek -- President, Chief Executive Officer and Director

Bryan Schumaker -- Chief Financial Officer

Donovan Schafe -- ROTH Capital Partners -- Analyst

Paul Coster -- JPMorgan -- Analyst

Chris Tsung -- Webber Research -- Analyst

Eric Stine -- Craig-Hallum -- Analyst

Laura Sanchez -- Morgan Stanley -- Analyst

Graham Price -- Raymond James -- Analyst

Joseph Osha -- JMP Securities -- Analyst

Greg Lewis -- BTIG -- Analyst

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