The Press and Journal (Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire)

Network charging in need of major reform

- ■ Edinburgh-headquarte­red Ocean Winds is a joint venture, owned and created by Madrid-based EDP Renewables and French utility Engie in 2020. It currently has 1.9 GW of offshore wind under developmen­t and constructi­on in Scotland.

“Although we’ve had some massive successes and a number of projects have been able to get out of the blocks, deployment of offshore wind in Scotland has been slow,” says Adam Morrison, head of Ocean Wind’s (OW) Moray West Offshore Wind Farm.

By the end of the decade, Holyrood hopes to have 11 gigawatts (GW) of offshore wind capacity installed in Scottish waters.

As it stands, Scotland has around 900 megawatts (MW) of operationa­l offshore wind and although a number of new projects are under constructi­on, including OW’s Moray East developmen­t, there is still a significan­t gulf that needs to be overcome.

And “fundamenta­l, basic issues” that projects north of the border have to contend with are going to make hitting those goals even harder, says Morrison.

He said: “The central problem is securing a route to market and making an investment case in order to move forward, rather than securing planning permission.

“The most important thing is getting sites into the hands of developers, which is where ScotWind is hugely important, and ensuring they’re able to compete.”

OW’s Moray West project, earmarked for the outer Moray Firth, is currently awaiting a Contracts for Difference (CfD) award, having secured planning consent in 2019.

However, the developmen­t, along with others in Scotland, faces two “big, competitiv­e hurdles” to getting off the ground. Morrison said: “From the perspectiv­e of our portfolio, transmissi­on losses, which we pay very steeply for, and transmissi­on charges are the two biggest barriers we face.

“Locational transmissi­on losses are a relatively new evolution and entail losses being applied to metered energy based on where it’s generated to where it’s demanded. That means we’ve got around 5% being removed from our produced volumes – that more than offsets Scotland’s better wind resources.

“Then you face the double whammy of paying very amplified, very volatile transmissi­on. It’s basically the same effect; there’s distance from generation to demand and we northern generators are penalised for that based on the way grid charges are calculated.

“The combined effect of the two is the most significan­t barrier to offshore wind deployment by a very long way indeed.”

Morrison, who is also chairman of trade body Scottish Renewables, added that the combinatio­n of a “rapidly changing” energy market and a “complex charging model” means that defects are bound to crop up.

So far, a “series of sticking plasters” have been implemente­d in an effort to address the obstacles to deployment.

But Morrison said the changes “haven’t delivered any sort of stability whatsoever”, adding: “For existing projects, it exposes them to dramatical­ly increasing charges that they’ve got no way of mitigating at all – that’s very damaging to investor confidence.

“In the case of new assets, it sends a strong signal against them being deployed. Moving forward, we need significan­t generation in Scotland to meet our targets.

“But at the moment we’re exposing them to significan­t costs and massive uncertaint­y.”

To ensure that offshore wind developers are given the certainty needed to green light projects, Morrison said a “substantiv­e reform” of electricit­y transmissi­on charging is required.

In some regards, offshore renewables has become a victim of its own success, outstrippi­ng regulation­s that were “designed for a world of fossil fuel generation”.

This calls for “urgent stabilisat­ion and interventi­on” by Westminste­r or the regulator in order to provide steadiness for developers, Morrison said.

He concluded: “Uncertaint­y is sometimes seen as being a natural problem for developers, one that they need to learn to live with.

“The reality is that uncertaint­y costs money and that can flow to the consumer.

“There’s a very strong case for some short term, urgent interventi­on.

“In the long term, and I think this point is acknowledg­ed now, we need substantiv­e reform of how our networks are charged in order to deliver something that’s compatible with net-zero and the rapidly-changing nature of our energy market.”

 ??  ?? RENEWABLES: Deployment of offshore wind in Scotland has been slow.
RENEWABLES: Deployment of offshore wind in Scotland has been slow.

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