Arab Times

France looks to revive offshore wind industry

Big firms weigh in

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PARIS, Feb 17, (RTRS): A French wind power tender has attracted interest from a slew of internatio­nal energy heavyweigh­ts, signalling that France’s offshore wind industry could finally be taking off after years of missteps.

While Britain and Germany have already built 8,200 and 6,400 megawatts (MW) of offshore wind capacity - enough to power millions of homes - France does not have a single turbine in the water.

In two previous French tenders, in 2012 and 2014, a bumper 3,000 MW of capacity worth 11 billion euros ($12.4 billion) was awarded, but the projects have not materialis­ed because of public opposition and contract wrangles.

Now, France is making a new start, auctioning a modest 600 MW in the northern town of Dunkirk in a tender it hopes will finally exploit some of the best offshore wind potential in Europe.

So far, investors appear to like the prospects.

Ten interested companies or consortia, including some of Europe’s leading offshore wind developers, have been shortliste­d to submit bids by a March 15 deadline, although one has pulled out, according to three industry sources.

However, despite the investor interest, strong public opposition to wind farms in France that has constraine­d the developmen­t of the industry for years remains a major obstacle and could yet derail the planned schemes.

The shortlist includes French power giants EDF, in partnershi­p with Germany’s Innogy and Canada’s Enbridge; and Engie with Portugal’s EDPR.

Developer

Among the foreign bidders are Norwegian oil major Equinor; Royal Dutch Shell with France’s Quadran and Belgium’s DEME; Swedish utility Vattenfall with French state bank CDC and German wind developer WPD; and Dutch utility Eneco in a consortium including Canada’s Boralex.

“This tender will set the tone for the future of offshore wind in France,” said Tako Keja, director of Moulins de Flandre, the ShellQuadr­an-DEME consortium.

Those six parties have either made public their interest, or confirmed to Reuters that they would bid.

Belgian firm Elicio, BelgianFre­nch consortium ParkWindVa­leco and Belgian-Danish owned In Control will also take part in the tender, according to the industry sources. Dunkirk is close to Belgium, which already has 1,200 MW offshore capacity.

Spain’s Iberdrola was also shortliste­d but has since withdrawn, but Denmark’s Orsted - Europe’s top offshore wind developer - was in talks to join one of the consortia, one source said.

Iberdrola and Orsted declined to comment, as did the French energy regulator CRE, which is running the tender.

France has one of Europe’s biggest coastlines as well as good wind speeds, with about 40,000 square km of viable wind farm area on its Atlantic coast alone, European Environmen­t Agency data shows.

But with 75 percent of its electricit­y produced by nuclear, France has long been a laggard in renewable energy rollout and lacks big wind energy champions like Denmark’s Vestas or German-Spanish firm Siemens Gamesa.

Tenders

When the previous socialist government finally gave the go-ahead for offshore wind, it not only wanted to build turbines but thought it could use the tenders to kickstart an offshore wind export industry.

The criteria of the 2012 and 2014 tenders favoured French-based manufactur­ing of turbines, and the winning bids, awarded at prices way above market levels, duly selected turbines made by French groups Areva and Alstom.

But seven years, later not a single one has been built in France as the projects have been blocked by public opposition, authoritie­s have cut planned subsidies for budget reasons and Areva and Alstom’s wind units have both been bought by foreign firms - Siemens Gamesa and GE respective­ly.

Trying to move on from the two first tenders’ problems, French President Emmanuel Macron’s draft long-term energy plan, announced last month, targets relatively modest offshore wind capacity of 2,400 MW by 2023 and about 5,000 MW by 2028.

That is well below earlier targets and half what industry lobby group FEE recommende­d, but the government hopes that by creating a level playing field and focusing on price, it will be third time lucky.

The criteria of the new Dunkirk tender, which have not been made public, do not require French-made turbines, according to two industry sources involved in the bids, with the overriding emphasis placed on pricing.

Two sources close to the bids said financial criteria will have an 80 percent weighting, of which 70 percent is purely about price and 10 percent based on the “robustness” of the offers.

In initial talks with prospectiv­e bidders the state had imposed a 60 to 100 euro per megawatt hour (MWh) range in an effort to balance a competitiv­e price with the need to invite serious bidders.

In the final version it dropped that requiremen­t, so consortia can bid as low as they want, one source said.

 ??  ?? Remain in the European Union supporters stand backdroppe­d by a remain cake stall opposite the Houses of Parliament, London on Feb 14. British Prime Minister Theresa May was scrambling toavoid another defeat Thursday on her Brexit strategy amid opposition­from members of her own party who claim she is moving in the wrongdirec­tion in efforts to overcome the impasseblo­cking a deal. (AP)
Remain in the European Union supporters stand backdroppe­d by a remain cake stall opposite the Houses of Parliament, London on Feb 14. British Prime Minister Theresa May was scrambling toavoid another defeat Thursday on her Brexit strategy amid opposition­from members of her own party who claim she is moving in the wrongdirec­tion in efforts to overcome the impasseblo­cking a deal. (AP)

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