LONDON --
Insurance costs for the renewable energy industry may more than
triple to $2.8 billion by 2020 as projects become more complex and
risky, a report commissioned by Swiss Re Ltd. found.
The report by Bloomberg New Energy Finance examined
markets for wind and solar power including Australia, China, the U.S and
Germany and estimated the industry spends about $850 million a year on
insurance now, according a statement from the London- based researcher
released today.
The increases will be driven by a move by the wind
energy industry to generate more power from offshore farms and as more
risk-averse investors such as pension funds enter the industry, the
report for the world’s second-biggest re-insurer found.
Nations from the U.S. to China are seeking to build
cleaner power plants to curb air pollution and maintain steady energy
supplies with as much as be $2 trillion of renewable power capacity
added between now and 2030, BNEF said. Insurers are tapping the growing
industry, with Munich Re, the world’s biggest re-insurer, agreeing the
first offshore wind turbine insurance in December with REpower Systems
SE.
“The demand for risk management solutions will grow,
partly because the renewable energy sector will simply get bigger, but
also because of increasing uncertainty affecting power markets in
general,” said Guy Turner, BNEF’s chief economist. As the technologies
mature, they’ll need to evolve from one where risks are “taken on the
chin” to one with fewer surprises, he said.
’Silver bullet’
Offshore wind turbines in particular require risk
management because their revenue may be hurt by unfavorable weather
leading to damage and delays, according to BNEF.
European nations are leading a push to install
machines in the North Sea where winds gust at more than 90 miles (145
kilometers) an hour and waves may top 15 feet (5 meters).
As nations seek to wean onshore wind and solar
parks off subsidies, they will become exposed to new, market-related
risks such as grid constraints and price volatility as they compete in
open electricity markets, the researcher said. While developers will
manage some risks internally, they’re likely to boost insurance-product
use, it said.
“Insurance is not a silver bullet,” Juerg Trueb, head
of environmental and commodity markets at Swiss Re Corporate Solutions,
said. “But by mitigating the risk in the construction phase and
improving the consistency and surety of revenues during operation,
insurance can help improve the return on investment
for renewable energy projects,” he said.
Copyright 2013 Bloomberg
http://www.renewableenergyworld.com/rea/news/article/2013/07/insurance-bill-for-renewables-seen-tripling-to-2-8-billion
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