Monday, July 11, 2016

Offshore Wind Power Cost-Cut Plan Gets Boost From Big Utilities

This is exactly the collaboration we need to move forward on big renewable projects.  Utilities are such an important part of the equation.  They can fully cooperate on bringing on new sources of clean power, such as we've seen with Green Mountain Power, Duke Energy, utilities in New Mexico, or block large projects.  They typically have strong influence over local government and PUC's (or other forms of government regulation over grids).

Here we see investments made up front to make offshore more affordable.  This will set the stage for shared data and research.  The working relationship necessary to move ahead quickly, between developers, regulators and grids, will be in place and functioning well.  That should speed along approvals which have been slow coming.

Good work we hope to see expanded worldwide.  It will be exciting to see costs come spiraling down bringing great benefit to all consumers...and, of course, stability, long-term, in pricing, perhaps just as key:

FROM BLOOMBERG

Dong, EON, Iberdrola and others pledge fresh funds to program


Scottish government will also help develop new technologies

Nine of the world’s biggest offshore wind farm developers joined with the Scottish government to fund a 7.9 million-pound ($10.3 million) study aimed at curbing the costs of the expensive renewable energy technology.
Companies including Dong Energy A/S, EON SE, Iberdrola SA and RWE AG, will together invest at least 6.4 million pounds over the next four years to fund the research and development of new technologies. The Scottish government will pitch in another 1.5 million pounds, according to a joint statement Monday.
The intention is to cut the cost of the technology below 100 pounds a megawatt-hour by 2020, putting it within striking distance of nuclear reactors. EnBW Energie Baden-Wuerttemberg AG, SSE Plc, Statkraft AS, Statoil ASA and Vattenfall AB are also funding the program, according to the statement.
The funds will deliver the next phase of the industry-led Offshore Wind Accelerator program, set up in 2008 by Carbon Trust, a former U.K. government agency. Since its launch, the OWA has delivered more than 125 projects, such as improved cable and turbine foundation designs, according to the statement.
“In the past we’ve looked at more radical innovations. Now we are fine-tuning and optimizing some of those,” Jan Matthiessen, director of offshore wind at Carbon Trust, said in a phone interview.
Even though Dong Energy last week won a contract to develop two wind farms off the coast of the Netherlands at 72.70 euros ($80.36) a megawatt-hour -- the lowest ever pricefor the technology -- no planned U.K. wind farm is expected to reach 100 pounds a megawatt-hour before 2020, according to Tom Harries, a Bloomberg New Energy Finance analyst.
This could be problematic for U.K. offshore wind developers that have been told by government that new subsidies are conditional on the industry reducing costs.
“The North Sea is the world’s leading offshore wind development area, and the collaboration between large international developers here is a welcome move towards securing and delivering affordable low carbon energy generation,” Jonathan Cole, Iberdrola offshore wind managing director, said in the statement.

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