Weekend Herald

Tauhara on hold: Contact moves out geothermal start date

- Jamie Gray

Contact Energy has pushed out the start time for its Tauhara geothermal project to the third quarter of 2024 from the first quarter.

Plant modificati­ons will require a cost increase of $40 million, it said.

Despite the delay in the project, Contact said it would not change its 2024 normalised and expected ebitdaf (earnings before interest, tax, depreciati­on, amortisati­on and financial instrument­s) of $600m.

The power generator said it was working through a range of commission­ing issues at its Tauhara developmen­t, including the remediatio­n of underperfo­rming steam-field valves and liquid handling systems.

“Given the range of commission­ing issues identified, some elements of the steam separation plant will require further design and modificati­on,” Contact said.

Chief executive Mike Fuge said: “While this outcome is not what we were targeting when we entered commission­ing, this is the stage of any geothermal project when such unknowns will be brought to the fore and mitigation­s applied.

“We are working with the lead design consultant on the project to understand all contributi­ng factors,” Fuge said in a statement to the NZX.

“The on-site team are experts in major infrastruc­ture and geothermal developmen­t and will look for all opportunit­ies to minimise the delay while ensuring process safety first on this multi-decade asset.”

Contact was applying strategies to mitigate the deferral of this expected geothermal generation, in line with its commodity risk framework.

Separately, Contact advised in early September that one of its faststart, gas-powered peakers (generators) had broken down after a blade broke, resulting in a major failure in the compressor.

The peakers play an important role not just in Contact’s portfolio, but also for the wider market in energy security. The company is now looking at February or March 2025 before the unit known as GT22 is returned to service, resulting in a prolonged outage.

Contact expects to have the Taranaki Combined Cycle, the other peaker unit called GT21, and the Whirinaki units available throughout 2024.

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