In a new consultation, the UK government wants to hold an auction next year for "established technologies" including onshore wind and solar alongside the already planned round for "less established technologies" like offshore wind including floating projects.听
The proposal follows legal challenges and the government's climate change advisors warning the ban hindered its ambitions for net-zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050.听
In the consultation document, the government said it was aware some onshore wind projects were able to operate on a merchant basis 鈥 whereby operators receive the market price for electricity.听
"However, there is a risk that if we were to rely on merchant deployment of聽these technologies alone at this point in time, we may not see the rate and scale of new聽projects needed in the near-term to support decarbonisation of the power sector and meet the聽net-zero commitment at low cost," according to the government in the .听
The consultation closes on 22 May 2020.
The inclusion of onshore wind in a new auction round will cheer many in the industry. However, it remains unclear how often and how many auctions will be held, and how much budget will be available.
An unofficial tip height of 125 metres 鈥 preventing most developers from using the latest, most cost-effective turbines, and so hindering projects鈥 ability to compete in the tenders 鈥 also appears to remain in place.听
While this tip height is not enforced by the government, the administration could direct permitting authorities to relax the restriction.听
Frozen out
Onshore wind was eligible to participate in the UK鈥檚 first tender in 2015, but was then barred from the scheme鈥檚 second round in 2017, and has since been unable to compete in the auctions.听
The government also ended the Renewable Obligation support scheme, which preceded the CfDs, in 2016 鈥 a year earlier than originally planned.
Its reported reversal of the ban on CfD access follows legal challenges against the technology鈥檚 inability to compete in the tenders, and the UK setting a target of net-zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050.
Onshore wind鈥檚 exclusion from the CfD scheme largely prevented operators from securing a stable revenue stream and had brought development in the UK to a halt.听
Projects with a combined capacity of just 485MW were fully commissioned last year, according to 搖錢樹娛樂城 Intelligence, down from a record 2.7GW in 2017,聽and 918MW in 2018.
Unable to secure CfD agreements, onshore wind developers had been forced to seek merchant contracts, with聽few successful in securing agreements to date.
Industry group RenewableUK welcomed onshore wind being reinstated into the CfD scheme but added that more details were needed on auction volume and timing.听
鈥淎 new auction will allow the pipeline of shovel-ready onshore wind projects 鈥 those that have already gone through the planning system and secured consent 鈥 to compete for contracts to provide new renewable generation capacity," the lobby group said.
鈥淚t is vital that the UK secures new power sources to meet net-zero and avoid an energy gap as coal power ends in 2024," it added.
Economic case
In future auction rounds, several thinktanks and industry groups believe onshore wind developers could secure power contracts that, while providing revenue certainty and stability, are 鈥渆ffectively subsidy-free鈥.
RenewableUK said onshore wind developers could secure contracts at prices within the range of those achieved by offshore wind developers in the last CfD round, a spokesman told 搖錢樹娛樂城.听
Offshore wind farms secured contracts to generate power for 拢39.65-41.61/MWh in 2012 prices, or 鈧52.48-55.08/MWh in 2019 prices, in the September 2019 round.听
As these prices are projected to be below wholesale prices when the projects are due to be commissioned, developers would return surplus payments to the government.
鈥淭he contracts will provide the certainty and stability needed for onshore wind developers to go ahead with projects on what is effectively a subsidy-free basis," the RenewableUK spokesman said.
A 2018 study by consultancy BVG Associates suggested that onshore wind prices could fall from 拢49.40/MWh in 2019 to 拢45/MWh (both in 2017 prices) by 2025 鈥 below projected wholesale electricity prices.
Scottish Renewables chief executive Claire Mack noted: 鈥淎ccess to the contracts for difference mechanism does not mean subsidy. These most competitive projects will be delivered at prices far below the wholesale cost of power.鈥
Meanwhile, the government鈥檚 climate advisory panel, the Committee for Climate Change, had previously warned that barring onshore wind and solar PV from auctions 鈥渓imits the potential speed of decarbonisation and adds to costs鈥 to carbon neutrality by mid-century.
Floating鈥檚 role
BEIS will also consider how to integrate floating offshore wind into the CfD scheme.
It would be included in 鈥榩ot 2鈥 for less-established technologies, but it is not yet clear whether it would compete directly against fixed-bottom foundation offshore wind - which has dominated previous tenders, securing the most capacity while achieving large cost reductions.
Fixed-bottom offshore wind could remain in 鈥榩ot 2鈥 or could have its own tender round, in a separate 鈥榩ot 3鈥 - meaning floating offshore wind would compete against 鈥榣ess-established鈥 technologies such as geothermal, remote island wind, tidal stream and wave energy - according to the consultation document.
BEIS stated: 鈥淥ffshore wind (including floating) is potentially the most scalable renewable technology and could play a huge role in delivering net zero at low cost by 2050.鈥
It added that 鈥渇loating offshore wind will need to deliver value for money, demonstrated through competitive auctions鈥, and that providing fixed-bottom projects with its own pot, would allow 鈥渕ore potential for floating offshore wind projects to successfully compete in the next CfD allocation round鈥.