LONDON --
The cost of running and maintaining wind farms has fallen 38 percent
in four years as competition among contractors increased and turbine
performance improved, bringing closer the day that the technology
matches fossil fuel.
The average price of operation and maintenance
contracts for onshore farms this year slid to 19,200 euros ($25,000) a
megawatt from 30,900 euros in 2008, Bloomberg New Energy Finance said
today. It took data from 38 developers and service providers in more
than 24 markets for its first O&M Price Index.
“Wind power has
done much to improve its competitiveness against gas-fired and
coal-fired generation in recent years via lower-cost, more technically
advanced turbines and more sophisticated siting and management,” Michael
Liebreich, chief executive officer of London-based BNEF, said in the
statement.
The figures help inform debate in the U.S. and
Britain, where governments are considering how much to subsidize
renewable energy. BNEF’s findings show manufacturers led by as Vestas
Wind Systems A/S are bringing down prices, making the machines more
profitable for power providers to run.
Britain is cutting subsidies for onshore wind by 10
percent as Prime Minister David Cameron’s government discusses halting
subsidies once the current renewable energy targets are met. In the
U.S., President Barack Obama’s administration is pushing Congress to
renew tax credits favoring wind in the face of opposition from
Republican lawmakers.
Subsidy Dependence
Without the U.S. credit, the market for wind towers
may fall to $100 million to $500 million next year from $2 billion to
$2.5 billion at present, BNEF said on July 31.
Declining costs for servicing wind farms are positive
for developers of projects, which are suffering from subsidy cuts across
Europe and the U.S. Service agreements are also an important additional
revenue stream for turbine makers such as Vestas, the world’s largest
turbine-maker.
Developers expect O&M pricing to be “fairly
stable” to at least 2015 and view turbine makers Enercon GmbH, Siemens
AG and Vestas as the best service providers, according to BNEF.
Enercon’s full-service contracts were nearly 20 percent cheaper than the average from 2008 to 2012.
Copyright 2012 Bloomberg
http://www.renewableenergyworld.com/rea/news/article/2012/11/wind-farm-operating-costs-fall-38-in-four-years-bnef-says
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