Stephanie McGregor
Transcription
Stephanie McGregor
1 UK’s Offshore Transmission Regime: A case study for financing a low carbon future Stephanie McGregor Director Offshore Transmission June 2011 www.ofgem.gov.uk Today’s presentation 1. Big picture 2. The OFTO 3. Making the opportunity real (aka fundable) 4. Opportunities/challenges ahead All you can see in 30 mins! www.ofgem.gov.uk Critical developments & debates… Electricity Market Reform Retail Market Review Climate change targets RO review EU Renewable Energy Directive European Intergration Significant challenges ahead www.ofgem.gov.uk …grand ambitions… UK energy policy aspirations: • • • • • Meeting the 2020 Renewable energy commitment; Decarbonisation of electricity by 2030; 2050 carbon pathways; Marine renewable generation – potentially up to 67GW installed by 2030; Nuclear – could have a significant role in decarbonisation. This will require significant new transmission infrastructure. Similar aspirations across Europe www.ofgem.gov.uk ….and a universal challenge for a low carbon future… www.ofgem.gov.uk ….securing investment! Estimates - £200bn + Capital markets fragile Market players seeking certainty (investors, funders, developers, operators, suppliers….) Challenges & opportunities ahead Xx www.ofgem.gov.uk OFTO regime Implementing a model which is… ...attracting/delivering investment www.ofgem.gov.uk What is the OFTO opportunity? • Offshore Transmission Owner (OFTO) • An entity licensed to provide transmission services • So what is an OFTO again? • How do we select an OFTO? • How does the OFTO licence work? • Market activity to date • The owner and operator of the assets relevant to provide the transmission services Xx www.ofgem.gov.uk What is an OFTO (2)? Onshore TO Offshore Transmission Owner (OFTO) Licencee Generator Connection to onshore network Onshore Substation Offshore Substation Platform Subsea cable 132 kV 33 kV Inter Array Cables www.ofgem.gov.uk How do we appoint an OFTO ? Developer project qualified by Ofgem ˜ ˜ financial commitment detailed data provision • Ofgem run a competitive process - defined stages & requirements • Project specific & revenue (20 year) based bidding • Identified project, known transfer value & clear licence obligations • Long list of bidders Qualification to Tender (QTT) Scored Short list of 3-5 bidders Invitation to tender (ITT) Scored • Pre-qualification (PQ) Pass/fail Preferred Bidder & Successful Bidder Accessible to range of funding approaches Licence Grant www.ofgem.gov.uk The OFTO Licence - how does it work? 1. Obligations OFTOs are required to: • achieve the broad obligation to operate assets in line with industry best practice to minimise the effect and duration of any transmission outage • report details of any service reduction over 21 days • provide written statement of compliance with best practice if availability below 75% in a year or 80% over two years This creates an obligation to repair assets If does not comply, enforcement action could be significant - licence revocation www.ofgem.gov.uk OFTO Licence - how does it work? 2. Incentives • • Not to compensate generator for lost revenue – disproportionate Incentive designed to encourage behaviour to maintain availability • OFTO faces reduced revenue if it fails to meet availability target • Incentive significantly reduces equity returns in case of major outage – does not put OFTO at risk of breaking minimum cover ratios Design • Availability target set at 98% • Revenue uplift for good performance • Monthly weighting • 50% of OFTO revenue is at risk for performance below the target in a year • Revenue impact is spread over five years Xx www.ofgem.gov.uk OFTO Licence - how does it work? 3. Enforcement Authority can take enforcement action against licensees that: • • Contravene licence conditions Are likely to contravene licence conditions Enforcement actions can include: • • • Enforcement orders Fines Licence revocation Therefore up to 100% of revenue is at risk! www.ofgem.gov.uk Making the opportunity real (aka fundable) • Clear commercial & regulatory structure • Transparent & clear process • Accessible to different funding approaches • Project pipeline KEY = CERTAINTY www.ofgem.gov.uk Commercial & regulatory structure Licence NETSO O&M Contract Code s Transmissio n Licence Consents Government OFTO Ofgem Lease Sale & Purchase Agreement Crown Estate Lease Offshore Generator Generation Licence www.ofgem.gov.uk Key investment features Attractive investment sector Robust new regulatory regime Transparent competitive process Long term opportunity Strong UK political & regulatory support Rare opportunity for new entrants to UK transmission sector Relatively low risk asset class 20 year revenue stream with limited regulatory intervention Pass through of certain key costs OFTO protected from wind farm operating risk & risk of stranding Upside potential: opex, non-regulated services, increased capacity Well defined tender process, Structured to ensure level playing field & transparency 2 qualification stages followed by ITT stage with M&A data rooms A number of phases over several years: potentially £15 bn of assets Early participation will provide valuable experience Enduring regime offers design & construction opportunities www.ofgem.gov.uk Project pipeline • • • • • Linked to Crown Estates R1, R2 & R3 Zones Early tender rounds transitional rounds (TR1, 2a & 2b) Under enduring regime it will be developer/generator requirements & choices that influence timing & model for opportunities come to market. Enduring regime = generator choice of generator build or ofto build. Extensive engagement with generation developers on developing plans OFTO pipeline 2009 2010 2011 2020 35 Final Consultation Cumulative UK Offshore Wind Capacity (GW) 30 Go-Active 25 20 First Transitional Tender Process (£1bn+) 15 Go-Live 10 2nd Transitional Tender (up to £2bn+) 5 0 Enduring Regime Tender Process (£12bn+) www.ofgem.gov.uk Tender Round 1 Project Preferred Bidder/OFTO Robin Rigg (FC/Licensed March ‘11) G.Sands (S.8A con closed June ‘11) • Transmission Capital Partners (TCP) Barrow Ormonde Thanet Walney 1 Walney 2 Sheringham Shoal Greater Gabbard Value = £1.1bn & circa 2GW • Balfour Beatty • Macquarie • Green Energy Transmission (Equitix, Balfour Beatty, AMP) Savings forecasts positive www.ofgem.gov.uk Tender Round 2 Humber Gateway (300MW £218m) Race Bank (up to 620MW c.£500m) West of Duddon Sands (389MW £255m) Lincs (250MW £311m) Tranche 2a Projects (1.5GW & £975m est. value) TR2a bidders: • TCP • Blue Transmission (Macquarie/Mitsubishi ) • Green Energy Transmission (Balfour Beatty & Equitix) • National Grid Offshore Ltd Gwynt-y-Mor (576MW £306m) London Array (630MW £476m) Expected Tranche 2b Projects (1.3GW & £1m+ est. value) www.ofgem.gov.uk Opportunities & challenges ahead • Rapid market development • Moving into the enduring regime – generator choices • Co-ordination – enhancement • Wider policy landscape www.ofgem.gov.uk Market development • Market evolving rapidly on bidder & developer sides • Interest strong to date • Bidder/consortium configurations evolving • Market awareness & understanding increasing, breadth & depth in growing phase – bidders & generators • Particular interest in larger asset opportunities – interest expressed from potential future new entrants • Bidder/partnering approach may need to evolve for enduring depending on how projects come to market • Understanding of technology options, innovations & constraints www.ofgem.gov.uk Coordinated offshore transmission development • Ofgem/DECC announced coordination workstream in August 2010 to focus on opportunities for enhancing co-ordination within the offshore transmission regime • Offshore Transmission Coordination Advisory Group (OTCG) established & work underway with inputs from Stakeholder Community • Ofgem/DECC conclusions to be informed by a range of evidence & analysis • Assessment of options which emerge will relate to how they perform against Ofgem & Government objectives & statutory obligations • Any proposals that are set out in our conclusions report would be subject to public consultation www.ofgem.gov.uk …and there are major challenges ahead Investment challenge: • • • Significant capital requirement - £200 billion+ over the next decade to meet our aspirations; Capital markets fragile; Investors need certainty and stability • Impact on developers? • Impact on supply chain? Future still very uncertain: • Political uncertainty – eg impact of EMR proposals; • Scale and timing of onshore development – what role will nuclear play; • Scale and timing of offshore development – ODIS scenarios has a broad range 2567GW. Network development: • Long lead time to deliver new capacity; • Supply chain readiness – volume of new tech. What is the appropriate network configuration? 25 THANK YOU