The Scotsman

Riding a wave of opportunit­ies in Scottish waters

- Comment Alan Cook

The starting gun has been fired for investors and developers seeking new offshore wind opportunit­ies in Scottish waters with the launch of the Scotwind Leasing programme. Scotwind is the first round of offshore wind leasing in Scottish waters in a decade and is being run by Crown Estate Scotland (CES) in its role as manager of Scotland’s seabed.

Investors and developers can register their interest in obtaining an “option agreement” with CES and successful applicants will be granted leases to build offshore wind farms in areas of seabed identified as suitable in the Scottish Government’s Sectoral Marine Plan (SMP) for offshore wind, which has been published in draft form.

One part of the process attracting a lot of attention is the need for applicants to prepare and submit a “supply chain developmen­t statement,” setting out how they plan to engage with and utilise the supply chain to develop their projects. This must include informatio­n on the location of supply chain activity and evidence of how the commitment­s in the plan can be met. CES said in its launch summary document that it was encouragin­g “realistic” supply chain commitment­s. Over the last five to ten years there has been considerab­le pressure for offshore wind to radically reduce costs, and particular­ly to reduce consumer cost to the lowest point. Reduction in cost in the offshore wind sector is a major success story. However, this focus has implicatio­ns for local supply chain options.

Some may be puzzled that, for Scotwind, CES insists that supply chain commitment­s that must be made in the bid applicatio­n will not then be “scored” and so will not form part of the assessment to identify successful bidders. It is also worth noting that once through the bidding process, applicants will become contractua­lly committed to update, and endeavour to fulfil, their supply chain commitment­s, and that developers who secure a lease will be measured against those commitment­s. Those pledges will need to be updated when the project is about to go into constructi­on and there may be financial penalties if developers do not meet the agreed pledges, and in certain cases ultimately prevented from progressin­g the lease contract. There is a tension for bidders between, on the one hand, addressing the aspiration­s of politician­s and potential local supply chain participan­ts and, on the other hand, developing projects to be as economic as possible to bid successful­ly under the Contract for Difference regime.

At the same time, CES is keen for Scotwind to attract new entrants from around the globe. New global entrants to the Scottish offshore developmen­t market may feel less obliged to be seen to be meeting politician­s’ and unions’ local supply chain aspiration­s than existing Scottish/

Uk-based players. And more bullish bidders may even be tempted to submit limited supply chain commitment­s on the basis that the CES launch documentat­ion makes it clear that this will be irrelevant to the process of awarding options over seabed areas. More detail on the supply chain requiremen­ts for applicants will be keenly awaited, though this remains a moving target as CES has invited feedback on its supply chain commitment proposals by 31 July.

Shortly after the adopted SMP becomes available, an addendum to the Scotwind Leasing launch documentat­ion will be published confirming final details of requiremen­ts. CES is anticipati­ng closing applicatio­ns between October 2020 and early 2021. It said total investment in Scotwind Leasing could ultimately exceed £8 billion and deliver enough electricit­y to power every home in Scotland, saving more than six million tonnes of carbon dioxide emissions a year. But offshore wind is a global and very competitiv­e market and many countries have leasing rounds under way or in prospect. Any Scottish offering must be seen to be strongly competitiv­e, lest investors and operators be attracted to a more simplified bid process elsewhere.

Alan Cook, partner and renewable energy specialist at Pinsent Masons

There has been a lot of pressure for offshore wind to radically reduce

costs

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