Showing posts with label NER300. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NER300. Show all posts

Monday, November 12, 2012

Britain's carbon capture dream is over after EU cash refused

Chris Davies, the Liberal Democrat MEP who led discussion of the funding in the European Parliament
""That's nearly £500 million of investment in northern England and Scotland that George Osborne just threw away," tweeted Chris Davies, the Liberal Democrat MEP who led discussion of the funding in the European Parliament.

A failure by the British Government to provide details of funding guarantees means that none of the carbon capture and storage (CCS) projects it put forward will receive funding from the European Union.

According to Chris Davies, the Liberal Democrat MEP who led discussion of the funding in the European Parliament, an EU official speaking on condition of anonymity said the reason for the decision was “a lack of funding detail".

A spokesman for the Department of Energy and Climate Change (DECC) said it had not been informed of the decision and refused to comment.

Under the NER300 competition, governments of Member States propose CCS and renewable energy projects for financial support from sale of greenhouse gas emission allowances from the EU European Emissions Trading Scheme by the European Investment Bank.

Chris Davies said the failure was "a devastating blow" to British hopes of becoming a world leader in CCS technology.

"The government has no excuse,” he said. “The EU funding mechanism was only introduced as a result of British pressure and for us not to take advantage of it is simply woeful."

CCS, which captures carbon emitted from the generation of electricity by burning fossil fuels and places it underground, is supposed to play a key part in the British Government's plans to meet its carbon emission reduction targets, especially under the Energy Bill.

Funding details may have been omitted from the application to the EIB pending finalisation of the contents of this Bill, which is due at the end of this month, and which is the subject of continued conflict between the Treasury and DECC.

"That's nearly £500 million of investment in northern England and Scotland that George Osborne just threw away," tweeted Chris Davies on hearing the news.

The Government submitted two projects at the end of October: Progressive Energy consortium's pre-combustion coal gasification project on Teesside and Alstom's 'White Rose' oxyfuel capture system at Drax's proposed new 304 MW coal-fired power station in North Yorkshire.

It is not clear if the same decision applies to the Sound of Islay tidal renewable energy project that was put forward for funding by the Government.

Britain's attempts to become a world leader in this currently unproven technology is now in a complete shambles.

Firstly, a previous competition which it held to fund pilot schemes fell apart over a year ago, as it proved too expensive and had to be relaunched.

There was no shortage of applicants in the second round, but, to much astonishment, the favourite project was not selected by the Government last month. This was the Don Valley Power Project, which had already earned first place among all NER300 CCS proposals.

DECC might have taken this unexpected decision because it wanted to maximise the UK’s overall financial return from NER300. NER300 support for Don Valley would have amounted to €130 million only, while the project replacing it, UK Oxy CCS Demo, would have got funding of €337 million.

Now it looks like DECC won't get any funding at all.

Monday, July 16, 2012

Carbon capture: our get-out-of-gaol-free card just got smaller

Carbon capture and storage is not going to save us. We must wean ourselves off fossil fuels as quickly as possible.

It has emerged that it is now likely that just one carbon capture and storage project in the UK will receive funding from the European Investment Bank. This is the Don Valley Project, which has already received €180 million of European funding, and is now the only one of the nine projects put forward by the UK for European funding which will get anything at all.

This is due to the pitiful amount of cash now expected to be realised from the sale of carbon emission permits by the European Investment Bank this year under the NER300 financing package. A maximum of €1.5 billion is anticipated, due to the collapsing of carbon prices to record lows and the inability of the European Commission to do anything about it.

This cash must be shared between at least half of the 27 nations in the European Union. The Commission has stated that it wants the funding to be prioritised for member states “in economic and fiscal difficulty". You would think that this would mean Greece, Italy, Spain and Portugal.

Actually, it appears that Sweden is likely to receive funding for three proposals, the UK and Greece for two each, and Belgium, Portugal, France, Finland, Czech Rep., Germany, Austria, Italy, Poland and the Netherlands would get one each, when the final list is confirmed.

(I have put the full draft list of projects that may be funded at the bottom of this column.)

Moreover, in the second call, the remaining 15 Member States (Croatia will have acceded) will have to share a pot that might, if the carbon price remains at its current level, be half the value of the current pot. Some exciting proposals have failed to make the list, including an innovative floating wind turbine concept, a Romanian biofuels from algae project in Romania and the installation of smart grids in Hungary.

From the start, carbon capture and storage in the UK has suffered setback after setback. There have been a mixture of delays and price increases: the addition of carbon capture and storage technology to a coal-fired power station can add between 25% and 100% of the cost. Potential developers have pulled out.

The International Panel on Climate Change has always been somewhat sceptical of this technology, but nevertheless, given that most energy scenarios foresee that the world's supply of primary energy will continue to be dominated by fossil fuels until at least the middle of the century, it has been seen to be necessary to achieve stabilisation of atmospheric carbon dioxide levels.

I have shared this scepticism for most of the last decade, but more recently I have been inclined to accept that, while it does seem to let fossil fuel producers continue to satisfy society's addiction to their products into the distant future, to the detriment of the development of alternatives, it nevertheless must become an unfortunate part of our armoury of weapons with which to fight the war against rising average global temperatures, because of the dire straits in which we find ourselves.

Now, the developer of the Don Valley Power Project, 2CO, has previously indicated a need for grants totalling £1 billion to enable it to proceed. Under the terms of NER300, at least 50% of the funding must be provided by the member state. The EC can't give any single project more than €315 million (£230 million). CCS projects originally asked for far more than this (€600-700 million or £0.5 million).

To save face, DECC needs to provide much of the remaining cash, which could be up to £500 million. How likely is this? Last week, Greg Barker admitted that the cost of looking after existing radioactive waste will rise from eating up half of its annual budget to a staggering 75%. And, with the Treasury's Mr. Micawber eyes watching every remaining penny it spends, and a shopping list that includes the Green Deal, tax breaks for the North Sea oil and gas industry, new nuclear power stations, offshore wind farms and so on, something is going to have to give.

In April DECC launched another £1 billion competition to fund CCS projects which pledged ongoing finance through the forthcoming Contracts for Difference framework, assuming this becomes law. Meanwhile, the CCS Cost Reduction Task Force is supposed to be coming up with an action plan to reduce the costs of CCS. Samsung C&T and BOC have each agreed to take an equity stake in the Don Valley Project and will provide some match funding.

The 650 MW facility is supposed to be completed in 2016 and connect up to a host of additional CCS projects in the area. If built, it will be one of the most advanced projects of its kind in the world. I hope it goes ahead, but I equally hope that it is not to the detriment of the funding of other low or zero carbon initiatives.

The news also provides another reason why, later this month, the European Commission must urgently take steps to reduce the number of emissions allowances on the market in order to stimulate the price of carbon.

Above all, the delays in rolling out carbon capture and storage should send a deafening message to society that its get-out-of-gaol-free card is actually an illusion. Business as usual cannot continue. We must wean ourselves off fossil fuels as quickly as possible.

The list of approved projects

CCS

  • Don Valley Power Project, Yorkshire (2CO is the developer)

  • Belchatow CCS project, Poland

  • Green Hydrogen, Holland

  • Teeside CCS (Progressive Energy is the developer)

  • UK Oxy CCS demo, Yorkshire (Drax and Alstom are the lead developers)

  • C.Gen CCS demo, North Killingholme Power Station, Lincolnshire

  • Zero Emission Porte Tolle, Italy

  • Steelworks project, France

Reserve list

  • Getica CCS, Romania

  • Peterhead CCS, Scotland (Scottish and Southern Energy, Shell and National Grid are the developers)

Renewables

  • Pyrogrot bioenergy scheme, Sweden

  • GoBiGas bioenergy scheme, Sweden

  • BEST bioenergy scheme, Italy

  • Vindpark Blaiken wind project, Sweden

  • Ajos BTL bioenergy scheme, Finland

  • Windpark Handalm, Austria

  • Minos concentrated solar project, Greece

  • Swell wave power scheme, Portugal

  • Smart Grid Gotland scheme, Sweden

  • UPM bioenergy scheme, France

  • Innogy wind scheme, Germany

  • Litomerice geoethermal scheme, Czech Republic

  • Solar scheme, Portugal

  • Maximum concentrated solar scheme, Greece

  • Scottish Power tidal project, Isle of Islay

  • Slim distributed energy scheme, Belgium

  • Verbio straw bioenergy scheme, Germany

  • Hungarian geothermal project

  • Windfloat scheme, Portugal

  • PV megalopolis scheme, Greece

  • Archetype 30+ concentrated solar project, Italy

  • ETM Martinique wave power scheme, France