Last week the government published the final details of the upcoming allocation round for the UK Renewables auction.
Allocation Round 7 (AR7) of the Contracts For Difference (CFD) scheme will run with the largest budget ever and 20-year contracts, an increase from the previous 15-year offers.
The administrative exercise prices for each technology have been determined and are given in 2024 Currency – Insulting Rounds were in the prizes of 2012.
For solar energy, the exercise price is £ 75/m in particular the administrative exercise price is the maximum that the government is willing to pay, not the amount it will certainly do.
In the previous CFD round there were AR6, with prices for Zonne -PV, onshore and offshore wind released awarded at more than 18% under their administrative exercise prices. The bidding ceiling for solar energy is lower this year than last year.
Ana Musat, executive director of policy and involvement at the OFSHORE TECHNICAL TECHNICS RENEWABRUCH, of which the CEO of Great British Energy than Caesar was CEO, said that this year’s CFD auction parameters are “more a reflective market reality than in previous years”.
There is Significant focus on wind technologies for AR7With fixed soil and floating offshore wind, each it has given their own pots (Pot 3 and Pot 4) that will run separately from other technologies-AR7 will be for offshore wind and solar energy is part of AR7A.
The application window for AR7A and AR7 opens on August 7 and is open for 20 days.
Problems with grid connection Problems cause project delays
This can be a difficult time frame for some; Many are well aware of the current problems with the Application Portal of the National Energy System Operator (NESO) that is open for Gate 2 under the reforms of the grid connection.
After a large number of complaints from developers, Neso confirmed on July 16 that it would extend the deadline for applications in a live webinar.
The window to make a gate 2 grid connectionBy providing evidence of the willingness and strategic coordination of a project per connecting reform proposals that have been accepted by OFGEM, it was initially due to the end of July 29.
Now, however, the earliest possible time that the window could close is August 18, and the operator will cancel at least 10 working days before it is closed. For projects at distribution level, network operators have been agreed to reflect the Neso timeline.
This creates some uncertainty, because CFDs are granted on the basis of a project that is far enough along the development frame to definitively happen and end after a certain period.
Although GATE 2 offers would not necessarily have been issued before CFD applications were opened, the delay makes project time lines difficult to define.
A requirement of a CFD application is that the developer indicates a target -in -operation window, to adjust to the supply of delivery of the allocation round. Earlier, if a project is not submitted within three months after that goal, payments will be reduced. For AR7 (and AR7A) this has been increased to a 12 -month window.
When Neso offers grid connections, developers may have reduced projects longer than this. In accordance with feedback from the industry, the Low Carbon Contracts Company (LCCC), who manages the CFD process, confirmed confirmed generators to request extensions for contractual dates affected on their connection date.
According to the LCCC, it is of the opinion that delays caused by connecting reform “are able to form a grid delay for the purposes of the CFD”, and because such extensions are permitted, generators can demonstrate the impact on their project.
It added that “such an application for contractual exemption still has to meet all relevant contractual requirements, including the generator and its representatives who use reasonable efforts to reduce the effects of such a delay”.
