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Northland Power Inc (Ontario) T.NPI.PR.B


Primary Symbol: T.NPI Alternate Symbol(s):  NPIFF | T.NPI.PR.A | NPICF

Northland Power Inc. is a Canada-based global power producer focused on helping the clean energy transition by producing electricity from clean renewable resources. The Company owns and manages a diversified generation mix, including onshore renewables, natural gas energy, as well as supplying energy through a regulated utility. Its facilities produce electricity from clean-burning natural gas and renewable resources such as wind and solar. The Company’s segments include offshore wind facilities, onshore renewable facilities, natural gas facilities, and utilities. The Company’s natural gas facilities use turbines to produce electricity. It owns or has an economic interest in approximately 3.4 GW (net 2.9 GW) of operating capacity. The Company also has an inventory of projects in construction and in various stages of development encompassing approximately 12 GW of potential capacity. It operates power infrastructure assets in Asia, Europe, Latin America, and North America.


TSX:NPI - Post by User

Post by Dibah420on Sep 08, 2023 11:32am
149 Views
Post# 35626214

No Bidders Blowing in the Wind

No Bidders Blowing in the Wind

No Bidders in British Offshore Wind Auction

Reporting from London

The British government said Friday that no offshore wind developers bid in its latest auction of renewable energy contracts, dealing the latest in a series of setbacks to what has been the country’s flagship renewable energy technology. Developers stayed away because the minimum price support being offered was not high enough.

The news, which was expected, produced criticism from the opposition Labour Party and environmental groups. Ed Miliband, Labour’s spokesman for energy, told the BBC on Friday that the results were an “absolute disaster” that should have been foreseen by the government.

 
ImageA row of gray offshore wind turbines, atop yellow platforms, sit in large body of water.
All aspects of wind farm development, from turbines to steel and copper, are facing higher costs, developers say.Credit...Andy Buchanan/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
 
A row of gray offshore wind turbines, atop yellow platforms, sit in large body of water.

The failed auction is the latest blow to offshore wind, a technology that governments and utilities in Europe and the United States are betting on to deliver large amounts of clean electric power to tackle climate change. The British government, for instance, aims to triple offshore generating capacity by 2030.

Hit with rising costs on all aspects of offshore wind farms, from wind turbines to steel and copper, developers are signaling that they need higher revenues to make the projects financially viable.

So far, governments have largely declined to change their terms, and so a kind of developers’ strike has set in that will likely delay projects or even lead to some being scrapped.

The costs of electric power from offshore wind, which have declined sharply over the last two decades, also seem likely to rise.

All that said, the auction was not as much of a disaster as portrayed by critics. Deepa Venkateswaran, an analyst at Bernstein, a research firm, said that eligibility criteria and other considerations meant that very few developers were likely to participate in this round anyway.

The British auction did attract bidders for onshore wind and solar schemes.

Britain supports renewable energy through a subsidy system known as “contracts for difference.” In essence, developers are guaranteed to be paid a certain price — an estimated £69 per megawatt-hour in this case — for the power that their projects generate.

These guarantees are intended to give companies certainty and encourage financial institutions to put up the large sums, ranging well into billions of dollars, required to build big wind farms.

Until recently, the British system received good reviews and has helped encourage large investments in renewable energy.

More recently, though, with inflation soaring, the government’s efforts to use the scheme to drive down power prices for consumers have caused developers to back away.

Vattenfall, a major developer, put a large planned project in the North Sea on hold earlier this year, saying costs were rising by as much as 40 percent.

The problem is not limited to Europe. Offshore developers are also trying to renegotiate the terms of contracts to supply power in the United States. Some have been willing to scrap contracts and absorb the resulting financial penalties.

Recently, Orsted, the largest offshore wind developer, announced a potential $2 billion write-down on planned projects in the United States and warned that it could wind up canceling them.

Analysts say that this series of problems for a much promoted technology is likely to push governments to revise the terms of future auctions. In Britain, the failure “puts pressure on the U.K. government to change auction parameters” said Ms. Venkateswaran, the Bernstein analyst.

The government does seem chastened by the tarnishing of an industry that is seen in Britain as a major success.

“We will work with industry to make sure we retain our global leadership in this vital technology, “ the British government said in a news release on Friday.

The sputtering of government support systems may also encourage a shift away from subsidy regimes, some analysts say.

Stanley Reed has been writing from London for The Times since 2012 on energy, the environment and the Middle East. Before that he was London bureau chief for BusinessWeek magazine. More about Stanley Reed


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