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Rampion Offshore Wind Farm Lifetime Subsidies Will Total £2.5 Billion

June 1, 2018

By Paul Homewood

 

 

From The Argus:

 

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THE onshore headquarters of the Rampion windfarm was officially opened yesterday.

Maria Caulfield MP unveiled a plaque at the new operations and maintenance base – a massive building at Newhaven’s East Quay.

Sixty staff will work from the premises, mainly the crews who service and maintain the farm’s 116 offshore turbines.

Ms Caulfield said it was outstanding news for the town that such an exciting operation was now based in Newhaven, pointing out the facility will generate enough electricity to power half the homes in Sussex.

http://www.theargus.co.uk/news/16257460.Rampion_windfarm_HQ_officially_opened/ 

 

We go on to read the usual guff about number of homes supplied, CO2 saved, blah, blah. But, strangely, no mention of the cost to consumers of all of this.

For that, we need to consult GWPF:

The 400 MW Rampion Offshore Wind Farm is nearly complete, and has now formally opened its Operations and Maintenance headquarters in Newhaven. This wind farm alone will add £2.5 billion in total to the cost of UK electricity over its approximately 20 year lifetime, that being the total subsidy to be paid at a rate of about £126 million a year over the two decades.

Parliamentarians and other decision makers have have a fatal weakness for policy outcomes forming a suitable background for a photograph, and Maria Caulfield, MP, who represents Lewes in Sussex, duly turned up  to wear the hard-hat-and-hi-viz-jacket and give an upbeat speech at the opening of the Newhaven headquarters of the Rampion Offshore Wind Farm, which is currently approaching completion. No politician hoping for re-election can be expected to be on oath in such situations, and the phoney absurdity of  these ceremonies is perhaps the defining and soul-destroying occupational hazard of modern constituency life. Who knows what MPs really think when they open a wind farm. Perhaps they are not altogether sure themselves. If so, their uncertainty would be intelligible if not forgivable, for good information is hard to come by, and in spite of increasing awareness in some circles of the underlying economic realities of the UK’s renewables programme, the industry has wisely relied on public misconceptions and patiently stood its ground while refusing to talk about the subsidies unless absolutely forced to do so.

Stations currently commissioning, like Rampion, even benefit from the fact that even those members of the public who are interested in such matters are under the impression that the whole orgy of subsidies is over. Hasn’t the Renewables Obligation closed? Hasn’t the Treasury put a freeze on new renewables subsidies until the mid 2020s at the earliest? Yes, yes. The RO closed to new entrants in 2017, and the moratorium imposed by the Treasury in last year’s Autumn Budget is perhaps the most significant and under-publicised climate policy decision of the last five years or so. – The game is clearly up. But if so, what is Rampion playing at? If you turn for such economic information to the wind farm’s otherwise very informative website you will be disappointed.  The developers are only too happy to tell you that the project has created a number of jobs locally, that it is making a substantial sum available for a local community fund, that it will generate enough electricity for 350,000 homes, that it will prevent the emission of a certain quantity of carbon dioxide, and that they are investing £1.2 billion in the project. Of their likely income you will find nothing.

But £1.2 billion is a great deal of money, and represents the disposition of a vast bulk of real world resources, about £3m/MW in fact, perhaps four or five times as much as the capital cost of a Combined Cycle Gas Turbine (CCGT). Sensible companies don’t spend on that scale without a very clear idea of how they will make a return. What could possibly motivate the site’s owners? (Those owners, by the way, are E.ON (50.1%) the Green Investment Bank (25%), now owned by Macquarie Group Limited, and, curiously, the North American energy company, Enbridge (24.9%), whose pipelines move about one fifth of all the natural gas consumed in the United States.)

The answer is subsidies, of course, for the Rampion Offshore Wind Farm has a legacy entitlement under the so-called “grace period” of the Renewables Obligation. Ofgem’s public register tells us that this station (R00034RPEN) was accredited on the 26 November 2017. It will therefore receive 1.8 Renewable Obligation Certificates (ROCs) for every one of the approximately 1,400,000 megawatt hours that its owners believe it will generate.

At current ROC prices that will amount to about £126 million pounds a year in subsidy. The wholesale price of the electricity will only add about another £60 million a year, so roughly two thirds of the annual income of the project will be non-market public support. Put another way, using CCGTs instead of Rampion, the UK would have almost three times as much electricity for the same cost, and have it when that energy is on demand rather than at the mercy of the weather.

Furthermore, these subsidy entitlements are for the long term, and over the twenty year lifetime the total subsidy to Rampion will come to about £2.5 billion. This is the hangover from the renewables party, and why the official projections for renewables subsidies, such as those presented by the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) continue to increase from the current level of £8.8 billion per year to £11.5 billion per year in the period 2022 to 2023 (see tab 2.7 in the OBR’s “March 2018 Economic and fiscal outlook – supplementary fiscal tables: receipts and other”), in spite of the closure of the schemes and the refusal of the Treasury to introduce replacements.

The UK government is very prone to bragging about the falling cost of offshore wind, which it demonstrates by pointing to the £57.50/MWh bids made in the last round of Contracts for Difference (CfD) auctions and applying to projects due to start generating in the early 2020s. Some of us don’t believe that those bids are actually economic, but government appears to take them at face value. In which case, why is another offshore wind farm, Rampion, commissioning only a few years before, set to receive more than double that CfD bid at roughly £140/MWh? One of these two figures must, surely, be a long way from the truth. Which is it?

https://www.thegwpf.com/rampion-offshore-wind-farm-lifetime-subsidies-will-total-2-5-billion/

21 Comments
  1. June 1, 2018 9:27 am

    Let’s hope that this 400MW of unreliables wear out, fall over or get blown to pieces as soon as possible.

    Where does the Conservative Party keep going to find idiots like Maria Caulfield?

    • Gerry, England permalink
      June 1, 2018 1:02 pm

      Is she one of those there to make up the numbers and tick the box? My MP falls into that category.

  2. Jack Broughton permalink
    June 1, 2018 9:27 am

    Assume that the final question in the GWPF doc is rhetorical!
    The subsidies to wind-farm investors is going to exceed the £9b saved by Brexit.

    • Gerry, England permalink
      June 1, 2018 1:00 pm

      Brexit will COST money not save it which is why in the Leave Alliance we never claimed that there was any savings to be made, unlike the morons and their bus. We expected a sensible Brexit would still cost money but that it was worth paying to escape the superstate project. However the Tory Brexit will cost billions more than is necessary because of leaving the Single Market.

      • Harry Passfield permalink
        June 1, 2018 1:56 pm

        As I understand the arguments, if we stay in the SM we will not be allowed to negotiate our own free-trade agreements with the rest of the World; we shall be controlled by the EU market rules.

      • June 1, 2018 4:20 pm

        No, leaving the single market will not cost billions, in any event that’s what we voted to do, leave the EU. Staying in the single market and being subject to their strictures is not leaving the EU.

      • Adam Gallon permalink
        June 2, 2018 1:18 pm

        No Harry. It’s the Customs Union that prevents us from negotiating our own deals.

  3. June 1, 2018 9:35 am

    So, why has the Argus failed to ask the obvious question ….. How much will it all cost?

  4. Steve Borodin permalink
    June 1, 2018 9:36 am

    Wind farms are monuments to man’s stupidity and gullibility. Oh, and women’s too apparently – sorry girls.

  5. MrGrimNasty permalink
    June 1, 2018 9:37 am

    I worked out on the back of a fag packet that if Rampion could theoretically continuously provide the average household’s entire energy usage (17,700kwh electric&gas, using a 35% capacity factor) – not unreasonable as the future is supposedly electric heating – it could actually run less than 70,000 homes at a cost of £2680 (wholesale+subsidy) per house per year.

    And that does not include batteries (lol) or gas backup which is required in reality.

    Assuming my maths isn’t that far out, no wonder energy bills are going up. If we forgot the windmills and used reliable CCGT instead, bills would be, what, 1/3,1/4,1/5, of what they are going to be? .

    Of course they make it sound like Rampion can run half of Sussex (350,000 homes) by only using average domestic electric usage (3900kwh), essentially ignoring energy for heating (gas 13800kwh) and all energy used for transport, industry, commerce etc.

    • Harry Passfield permalink
      June 1, 2018 1:47 pm

      Grim: Your boae calc got me to thinking so I dug out my BG bills. According to them I use about 4,250 kWh of electric and about 19,250 kWh of gas (equivalent). The electric is charged at 14.75p/kWh and the gas at 3.75p/kWh.

      Total kWh per year is therefore approx 23,500. How am I going to afford that when gas is turned off and we’re all electric (not that it matters as where I’m going is going to be very warm if those who wish me to go there are correct!)?

      So, 23,500 kWh of electric* would cost me just under £3,500 at current electric prices, almost three times what I currently pay (£1,340) on a combined tariff.

      * I assume I shall need to use the same equivalent amount of energy to replace my gas heating.

      • Chilli permalink
        June 2, 2018 7:12 pm

        Yup – the economics are grim – but don’t forget you can get something for nothing with a heat pump – so your 19,250 KWh of gas for heating may only require 10,000 KWh of leccy or less.

  6. June 1, 2018 9:45 am

    Can Mrs Caulfield explain how producing electricity at £140/Mwh help to reduce fuel poverty, I wonder?

  7. Sara Hall permalink
    June 1, 2018 10:03 am

    According to Gridwatch, as I write, wind power is producing 0.22% of the nation’s current electricity usage…0.08GW.

    • geoffb permalink
      June 1, 2018 11:02 am

      its now day 3 of no wind i did a fag packet calculation after 2 days on the size and cost of 7GW battery (averigish wind output) for 2 days based on the Tesla one in Australia, we would need 2713 such batteries at a total cost of £98 billion. For 3 days its 4069 at a cost £147 billion.!!!!!!

      • Mike Jackson permalink
        June 1, 2018 12:31 pm

        And how much space would they take up?!

  8. June 1, 2018 10:51 am

    The Limp Dems are probably to blame for this fiasco, I recall an article by Hune in 2015 gloating about all the “planet saving” contracts he had signed before leaving office. No wonder they have 60 maintenance jobs, to ensure the steady transfer of money out of bill payers bank accounts.

    Meanwhile the nasty capitalist energy companies are lined up to take the blame for rising prices.

    • Gerry, England permalink
      June 1, 2018 1:03 pm

      I don’t think it is fair to exclude Blue Labour from their share of the blame. After all, they all champion ‘fairness’.

  9. It doesn't add up... permalink
    June 1, 2018 12:41 pm

    Of course onshore at Shoreham there is 400MW of CCGT that can be called on to provide 400MW whenever it is needed. Rampion is estimated to produce just 106MW on average, but only when the wind blows.

  10. June 1, 2018 1:13 pm

    Posted on Facebook, with the comment: “One of the many reasons why we have austerity. Worth a read.”

Comments are closed.