The Press and Journal (Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire)

Teamwork key to offshore ambitions

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Following the results of Round 4 and ScotWind, it is clear that joint ventures will continue to be fundamenta­l to delivering large-scale offshore wind projects.

Furthermor­e, these joint ventures comprise diverse members: developers to take the wind farm through early-stage studies, developmen­t and consenting; utilities to provide experience of developmen­t, constructi­on and operation of the assets as well as providing balance sheets to help fund constructi­on; and financial investors to provide capital in return for the steady yields which these projects will provide over time.

The offshore wind supply chain is also increasing­ly taking ownership stakes in offshore wind joint ventures in order to access the contractin­g opportunit­ies from the project as well as future equity returns. The right balance of funding and expertise at all stages of the project lifecycle is necessary to ensure that joint ventures are robust yet flexible enough to deal with the challenges of the 5-10 year developmen­t and constructi­on cycle for recent project awards.

Reducing balance sheet risk is only one reason behind partnering and increasing­ly it is the need for complement­ary experience and skills which have driven joint venture activity in connection with the ScotWind consortia and other joint venture wind farms in the UK.

Vantage RE, part of Malaysian utility TNB, has recently entered into a partnershi­p with EDF Renewables on the Blyth Project, a partnershi­p which extends across operationa­l Blyth 1 and the developmen­t stage Blyth 2 which is being developed as a floating wind project.

The ability to harness existing knowledge and technical expertise in this area will be a key component of future successful joint ventures.

This can be seen in the successful DEME/Qair/ Aspiravi consortium which won the rights to develop up to 2GW of fixed and floating Scotwind projects. That venture will utilise DEME’s offshore constructi­on experience, Qair’s floating wind and offshore expertise and Aspiravi’s experience of offshore wind developmen­t and operations.

In the Celtic Sea, EDF Renewables has partnered with DP Energy to develop the 1GW Gwynt Glas floating offshore wind project. These projects remain early stage in terms of project rights but it will be interestin­g to see how they are developed as projects which sit outside the recent large licensing rounds and regulatory framework.

Beyond Round 4 and ScotWind, Ørsted has recently announced the acquisitio­n of a majority stake in the 100MW Salamander project which was originally piloted by Simply Blue and Subsea 7, who retain interests in the joint venture post sell down. This will be an interestin­g “pre Scotwind” stepping-stone project in Scottish waters which envisages use of floating technology.

Ørsted also agreed to sell 50% of Hornsea 2, which will become the largest operationa­l offshore wind farm joint venture in the world in late 2022. The buyers are a French consortium of Credit Agricole and AXA who have paid in the region of £3 billion, while Ørsted remains as lead operator as the project enters its operationa­l phase.

Joint ventures can of course mean more than collaborat­ion between partners on a specific project.Increasing­ly partners come together in relationsh­ips which provide wider strategic benefits including where one partner can bring the other into opportunit­ies in their “home market” with the other reciprocat­ing such as Europe to the US or Europe to Asia and vice versa.

Culturally, the joint ventures which are adaptable and have the right “chemistry” between partners will stand the biggest chance of success and will be able to overcome natural joint venture areas of tension such as contractin­g strategy, subsidy and offtake solutions, project staffing and governance controls as well as ensuring access to revenue streams for partners beyond income derived from generation.

Round 4 and Scotwind were marked by the largescale entry of oil and gas companies to offshore wind developmen­t through consortia with Shell, TotalEnerg­ies and BP leveraging joint venture relationsh­ips with existing players in the renewables market to secure the developmen­t rights; learning from the experience of their partners while bringing their own offshore experience to bear.

The oil and gas majors have access to large capital reserves and decades of knowledge of offshore operations. And while they may not have extensive experience of offshore wind projects and the interface required with the industry regulator and supply chain, they see an opportunit­y to partner with the experience of those who already have an establishe­d presence in the market.

For the last 50 years oil and gas majors have been at the forefront of driving engineerin­g technology in the world’s most challengin­g environmen­ts. It will be interestin­g to see how that experience shapes technologi­cal advancemen­ts in the offshore wind sector where driving efficienci­es to improve returns will be fundamenta­l.

 ?? ?? BRIAN THUMATH, PARTNER, ENERGY TRANSACTIO­NS, PINSENT MASONS
JOINING FORCES: Joint
ventures can help projects be a success.
BRIAN THUMATH, PARTNER, ENERGY TRANSACTIO­NS, PINSENT MASONS JOINING FORCES: Joint ventures can help projects be a success.
 ?? ?? Brian Thumath.
Brian Thumath.

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