Business Standard

Profit beats Brexit in biggest race for power cables to UK POTENTIAL FOR PROFIT

- JESPER STARN, MATHEW CARR & FRANCOIS DE BEAUPUY 4 May BLOOMBERG

Nobody seems to have told Europe’s power industry about Brexit.

Even as Britain begins its exit from the European Union, there are at least 12 projects worth more than ^10 billion ($11 billion) combined in the works to expand the island nation’s connection to the surplus generating capacity on the continent. That’s because of the potential for profit in Britain, where a levy on carbon emissions and a lack of new generators to replace old plants means wholesale prices are a third higher than in France and as much as 80 per cent above the Nordic market.

The size of the investment­s in subsea power lines is unpreceden­ted, with projects planned from places including Iceland, Denmark and France. If built, high-voltage links would boost UK electricit­y capacity by the equivalent of all its nuclear reactors. The country already imports power as capacity has been squeezed amid coal plant closures, while wind and solar power fluctuates.

“The UK really needs more interconne­ctors,” Magnus Hall, chief executive officer of Vattenfall AB, the Swedish utility that’s part of a group that plans a cable from Norway, said in an interview from Stockholm. “They can partly supply the flexibilit­y that’s needed to make the whole system balanced.”

Developers include grid companies, utilities and closely held investors. They’ll charge traders a commission for using the cables. How much typically depends on the arbitrage between the markets. Infrastruc­ture funds are also keen to invest because of the relatively stable returns, according to Baringa Partners Ltd., a consultant in London.

The UK move to quit the EU, known as Brexit, isn’t without risk for the ventures. But there’s only a small chance there’ll be fees imposed on the new cables, because politician­s on both sides of the English Channel and beyond probably recognise they can keep costs low by expanding the marketplac­e, said Martin Callanan, a nonexecuti­ve director of Aquind, which plans a link from France that’s the largest of those proposed.

Britain, a net importer of power in 2015 and 2016, already has links with France, the Netherland­s and Ireland. The first of the new cables is slated for 2019.

There are about worth more than in the works to expand the UK's connection to the surplus generating capacity on the continent

That's because of the potential for profit in the UK due to a levy on carbon emissions and a lack of new generators to replace old plants

This makes the wholesale prices in UK a third higher than in France and as much as above the Nordic market

^10 billion 80%

They are needed because the UK supply margin has dropped near the lowest in a decade as old coal plants retire. The government will spend more than 3 billion pounds on future back-up programmes. Electricit­e de France SA’s new nuclear plant at Hinkley Point is already delayed by at least seven years from its original start date and some think it may take even longer to get the £18-billion ($23 billion) project up and running.

“We’re still 15 years away from new reactors in Great Britain,” said Torsten Amelung, managing director of the markets unit of Statkraft AS which owns Baltic Cable interconne­ctor between Sweden and Germany. “You always have to ask, what will happen in the meantime? That’s why you need cables.”

EDF Energy plans to complete the first new atomic generation unit at Hinkley Point in England by 2025, Gordon Bell, a company spokesman, said Thursday by phone.

“There are real supply and demand difference­s between Germany, France,

12 projects

Nordics and the UK, which create price differenti­als,” said Baringa’s Patel. Continenta­l power will be mainly exported to Britain for five-to-seven years before flows become more even, he said.

Before the Brexit vote in June last year, then UK Energy Secretary Amber Rudd warned leaving the EU might boost the nation’s energy costs by £500 million ($644 million), providing “a massive electric shock.”

The UK government declined to comment. Now that leaving is a reality, the government is keen to keep costs down. The interconne­ctors are important for diversifyi­ng supply, Energy Secretary Greg Clark told lawmakers last month at a hearing in parliament.

But there is still no guarantee they’ll be fully used, even if exports make financial sense. Capacity to Germany from Denmark was cut by 89 per cent last year because Europe’s biggest economy has a grid that gets overloaded when renewables surge. And this winter, Balkan nations were seen hoarding power during a cold snap in January, rather than sending it to neighbours.

Profitabil­ity of the cables may also shrink as each new link will narrow the price premium, even if it’s a distant scenario, said Didier Zone, head of developmen­t and engineerin­g at French grid Reseau de Transport d’Electricit­e SA, a subsidy to EDF, which plans to invest in two of the new links.

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