LONDON --
Birds, sharks and unexploded bombs from World War II are being blamed
for holding up offshore wind farms, raising doubts about the costs of
the technology.
Three utilities yesterday scrapped an expansion of
the world’s biggest offshore wind farm in the Thames estuary, east of
London. That capped three months when each of the six largest U.K.
utilities retreated from marine energy projects.
While developer EON SE highlighted concerns about
disrupting the wintering grounds of the red-throated diver, the broader
threat to the industry is its failure to bring down costs quickly enough
in nations that are increasingly concerned about the price of
electricity.
“It’s either the cost because of the technical
challenges or the environmental issues” that’s thwarting projects, Keith
Anderson, chief executive officer of Iberdrola SA’s ScottishPower
Renewables unit, said in an interview. “There’s a bit of realism that
unless we can deliver these projects for a lower price, then it’s
unrealistic to expect to continue to get political and government
support.”
The U.K. market is crucial to the industry because
it’s the biggest source of new projects and accounts for more than half
the global installed capacity. Prime Minister David Cameron’s government
has set incentives for offshore wind through 2019, hoping to stimulate
clean-energy jobs.
Those ambitions are being chipped away as developers
better understand the costs of the projects. Utilities have canceled as
much as 5,760 megawatts of planned capacity since Nov. 26, when RWE AG
dropped its 1,200 megawatt Atlantic Array.
London Array
About 6,930 megawatts of machines are working
worldwide now with 3,689 megawatts of them in Britain, according to
Bloomberg New Energy Finance. A thousand megawatts is almost as much as a
nuclear reactor produces.
EON, a German utility, along with Dong Energy A/S and
Masdar Abu Dhabi Future Energy Co. yesterday abandoned plans to expand
the 630-megawatt London Array by as much as 240 megawatts. EON said it
couldn’t guarantee progress even if it met requirements for a three-year
study of impact on red- throated divers, a fish-eating bird that can
swim more than a minute under water.
Cost Goal
The British government has set the industry a goal of
reducing its costs to 100 pounds ($167) a megawatt-hour by 2020. New
Energy Finance estimates it’s currently as high as $246, or 147 pounds,
and is unlikely to meet the target. “It’s probably not manageable,” said Sophia von
Waldow, a BNEF analyst. A cost of just under 110 pounds may be possible
by then, she said.
Dong, the biggest offshore wind developer, may be able
to cut costs to 100 euros ($137) a megawatt-hour in 2020, according to
Benj Sykes, who heads the Danish utility’s U.K. wind unit.
“Cost reductions are essential,” said Aris Karcanias,
London-based Managing Director of Renewable Energy at FTI Consulting.
“It’s still a nascent technology that has a price curve to go along.”
That’s the theme also for Danish Climate Minister
Martin Lidegaard, who said in an interview that policymakers need to
“create a legal framework that will drive innovation and bring costs
down,” and for U.S. Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz who said in January
that “offshore wind remains for us expensive.” The U.S. has no offshore
wind farms.
Basking Sharks
In the U.K., Forewind, a consortium that includes SSE
Plc, and a venture including Electricite de France SA downsized projects
this month. RWE AG canceled one plan and shrunk another in the past
three months, while ScottishPower in December cited basking sharks among
reasons for scrapping a project.
The U.K. government says offshore wind ambitions
remain on track, though the Department of Energy and Climate Change cut
its forecast in December. It expects about 10 gigawatts of capacity by
2020, down from a 2011 prediction of 18 gigawatts.
“It is perfectly normal for developers to adjust their
plans as they progress,” the energy department said yesterday in an
e-mailed statement. “This government is committed to a thriving offshore
wind sector.”
Germany, the third-biggest market after Denmark, cut
its 2020 target to 6.5 gigawatts from 10 gigawatts. German developers
are suffering from slow grid connections and Chancellor Angela Merkel’s
decision to retreat from nuclear power, said Henrik Stamer, Chief
Executive Officer of K2 Management A/S, a Danish consultant to
utilities.
Company Poverty
“Big German companies have lost their cash-cows,
because Angela Merkel said they have to close down their nuclear power
stations,” Stamer said. “That’s where they earned their money that they
could then go off and invest in offshore wind.” He said even reaching
6.5 gigawatts will “take a lot of work.”
Old munitions have also slowed the industry in Germany
and Britain. TenneT TSO GmbH two years ago detected several World War
II mines as it prepared to lay cables linking the EWE AG’s Riffgat
project to the grid. The link was completed last week.
New projects tend to be further from shore and in
deeper waters. That means costs are rising, and utilities can no longer
afford to shoulder the cost of projects themselves, said Ben Warren, an
environmental finance partner at Ernst & Young. “The utilities’ balance sheets haven’t substantially
improved in the last couple of years to enable them to afford to do
billion-dollar projects,” he said.
Logistical Challenge
The tougher conditions further out at sea mean
“everything becomes logistically more challenging in terms of costs and
times,” according to RWE’s Cowling. “You basically need to have offshore
hotels out at sea that can enable these things to be built,” he said.
Companies are trying to bring down costs in all areas
of the industry. More powerful turbines being tested by manufacturers
such as Vestas Wind Systems A/S and Siemens AG mean fewer foundations
are needed. RWE and Dong have commissioned specialized vessels to help
install turbines, and industry groups evaluating the costs of cabling,
servicing and ports.
ScottishPower’s Anderson said his company is focusing
on easier projects, such as a collaboration with Vattenfall AB off East
Anglia that could eventually reach 7,200 megawatts. Cost cuts will come along with more installations, said Paul Cowling, offshore wind director at RWE.
“If we build more wind farms and build more wind
turbines, the price will come down,” he said. “It’ll be more efficient,
more like shelling peas -- producing commodities rather than bespoke
bits of kit.”
Copyright 2014 Bloomberg
http://www.renewableenergyworld.com/rea/news/article/2014/02/birds-bombs-sharks-slow-offshore-wind-from-uk-to-germany
No comments:
Post a Comment