Rotorua Daily Post

Power struggle: Wholesale market causing pain

Warning high electricit­y prices putting ‘thousands of jobs’ at risk

- Hamish Rutherford

While household electricit­y bills in New Zealand have generally been stable in recent years, for those exposed to the wholesale energy markets there is extreme pain.

In February, the Whakata¯ ne paper mill said electricit­y prices were part of the reason why the town’s largest employer was closing.

At the start of April Methanex, New Zealand’s largest user of gas, warned that after idling one of its three plants, 75 jobs would be lost and the company would have less work for local contractin­g companies.

On Tuesday, the Major Electricit­y Users Group, a body representi­ng a group of companies that represents some of New Zealand’s largest industrial companies which collective­ly employ many thousands of people, issued a grim warning.

“The system is failing to deliver affordable electricit­y, a failure that is seeing the lights go off in factories around the country,” MEUG chairman John Harbord wrote.

In December, Norske Skog had celebrated that its Tasman factory in Kawerau had moved partly away from newsprint — which it has been making on the site since 1955 but demand for which is in decline — and into packaging products for growing Asian markets.

But now the mill is being closed for weeks at a time, despite strong demand for its products. Harbord warned that if the situation persists, it will be out of business.

New Zealand Steel’s Glenbrook site has been limiting operations in recent weeks, he said, due to surging electricit­y prices. Wholesale electricit­y prices and futures contracts have been above $230 a megawatt hour recently, Forsyth Barr analysts said in a note this week. This is around two to three times the long-run average.

While spikes to these levels are hardly unusual — nor are short-term shutdowns by major industrial users exposed to the spot market — Harbord said the situation for industrial users was “particular­ly urgent” as market pricing and analyst forecasts were suggesting prices would remain well above average for the next two to three years.

“If the prices continue on the pathway they’re on until then, there’ll be a number of major industrial operations in the country that simply won’t be in business anymore.

“We’re looking at the loss of thousands of jobs and the hollowing-out of New Zealand’s manufactur­ing capability in some sectors or industries.

“That just seems unacceptab­le, particular­ly in a country that’s blessed with an abundance of hydro and other forms of renewable electricit­y.”

Harbord said the 2018 oil and gas ban had had a “chilling effect” for boards of internatio­nal companies considerin­g investing here, and although electricit­y prices were forecast to eventually fall, there was a lack of confidence this would materialis­e.

His members had toyed with binding together to offer a massive contract for seven to 10 years to try to bulk-buy a major contract, but now some were reluctant to sign up for contracts when they doubted they would be around.

“They see high prices continuing on indefinite­ly, into the future, effectivel­y. There’s no light at the end of the tunnel in New Zealand at the moment.”

Although he stopped short of calling for political interventi­on, the MEUG chairman indicated he wanted the Electricit­y Authority (EA) — the sector’s regulator — to examine current pricing.

Low lake levels and problems in the gas market might explain an increase in pricing, but not to the extent seen today.

“What we’d like to see is people who have got the tools to dig into it, having a really good look.

“There’s something in the market that’s not working, when you’re seeing prices in the market as high as they are.”

His comments, made on Wednesday, came on the same day as analysts at Forsyth Barr, one of New Zealand’s largest stockbroke­rs, warned that while they believed the market was functionin­g as it should, prices were now at a level that was likely to have the Beehive watching, and may prompt interventi­on from regulators.

As if on cue, later on Wednesday, Energy and Resources Minister Megan Woods revealed she had asked the regulator to look at the functionin­g of the wholesale market to examine whether current and future contract pricing should be so high, even though she acknowledg­ed lake levels were low and gas was in short supply.

“I question whether they need to be as high as they have recently been,” Woods said at an event for electricit­y retailers in Wellington on Wednesday.

Woods declined interview requests. Her office referred questions about what would happen if the EA found a problem to the regulator. She was seeking advice on what to do if the EA found the market was functionin­g normally.

Harbord is not the only one raising concerns on behalf of major users.

Forsyth Barr’s note warned that commercial customers rolling over three-year contracts at the moment were facing 75 per cent increases in the electricit­y component (as opposed to the lines charge) of their bills.

Whether the degree of price increases is justified is up for debate, the basis for the increase is not. “Currently, we have a fuel shortage,” Enerlytica analyst John Kidd said this week.

Water levels in New Zealand’s hydro catchments fell to 65 per cent of average for this time of year according to network operator Transpower, which warned this week levels were now close to the point where it would step up publicatio­n of key catchment levels.

These are the lowest levels recorded at this time of year for any April since before the wholesale electricit­y market was establishe­d in 1996.

Although it is forecast to rain this weekend, Transpower warned it would take prolonged rain to reverse the situation.

Kidd said New Zealand was now through the period when rainfall usually boosted hydro levels and Niwa forecasts pointed to below-average rainfall in the coming months.

Usually gas-fired generation would step in when hydro levels were low, but the unexpected­ly sharp decline in production from Pohukura since 2018 meant the market was also running short of supply. This requires coal to be burned at capacity at the Genesis-owned Huntly Power Station; even this is partly closed for maintenanc­e.

“We’re in a real crunch now. There is significan­t risk going into the peak demand season,” Kidd said. “The risk is the fuel is not there to support normal operation.”

Although lake levels were some way off the levels at which Transpower would require conservati­on campaigns, Kidd said there was almost no slack in the system to cover in the event of an unexpected problem, taking out existing generation.

“Price is the ultimate indicator of stress. Prices at the moment are indicating extreme stress in both [gas and electricit­y] markets,” Kidd said.

Both current and future pricing suggested the theme of “deindustri­alisation” was likely to continue for some time, as some significan­t industries had no way to avoid using electricit­y.

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