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Sea Wind Europe. Helen Snodin. BWEA Offshore 2004. Contents. 1. Background 2. Scope 3. Findings 4. What does it mean?. Background. Greenpeace Question. Could offshore wind energy become a core part of Europe’s energy supplies? Could this be achieved by the end of the next decade?
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Sea Wind Europe Helen Snodin BWEA Offshore 2004 1044\BT\## 1
Contents 1. Background 2. Scope 3. Findings 4. What does it mean? 1044\BT\## 2
Background 1044\BT\## 3
Greenpeace Question • Could offshore wind energy become a core part of Europe’s energy supplies? • Could this be achieved by the end of the next decade? • As well as the global environmental benefits, would it bring other benefits to Europe? • What would need to happen along the way? • A focus on identifying, and overcoming, obstacles 1044\BT\## 4
Premise • Why is it not already obvious? • Global environmental benefits accepted • Sceptics not convinced it can make it in the real world • ….so, work through challenges one by one • Show by example and logic 1044\BT\## 5
Approach • Deliberately bold • Start with a target – 30% - and work back • Tease out challenges and actions • Result – if this is what we want, it will not be possible unlesss…. 1044\BT\## 6
Scope 1044\BT\## 7
Chapters • What are the implications for… • Growth rates • Sea-bed take / scale of development • Investment • Technology • Costs • Grid • Social issues 1044\BT\## 8
Findings 1044\BT\## 9
Growth Rates SeaWind Europe postulated offshore wind growth BTM predictions IEA predictions Wind energy to-date 1044\BT\## 10
Growth Rates • Growth in wind energy terms looks achiveable • In offshore terms, it is very ambitious • Installation volumes are very large at steeper parts of curve • Major constraint is the number of projects coming through the permitting system 1044\BT\## 11
Scale of development 1044\BT\## 12
Where will the investment come from? 1044\BT\## 13
Investment: current • In today’s markets, commercial-sector investment a necessity • With exception of Middelgrunden, investment to-date has been on balance sheet. Private equity structures emerging for some German projects. • Traditional model for wind is project finance. • Commercial banks will invest as financial risks defined. • There is a gap where uncertainty remains, which will be repeated as projects move into deeper/ more exposed environments and as technology develops. 1044\BT\## 14
Investment: future • On average, would require €14-24 Billion per year capital investment (wind is capital intensive) • SeaWind Europe would represent a significant proportion of all project finance deals, but is comparable to the scale of investment in energy sectors. • New finance structures (for wind sector) for offshore wind? • Other sectors have momentum. There needs to be a “belief” that there will always be a market for offshore wind. • A clear role for institutional banks to bridge some of the investment gaps 1044\BT\## 15
Technology Reinforced plastics Everyday use in manufactured goods, esp. similar to composition in aerospace and boat-building. SeaWind Europe would require growth in specialist wind industry suppliers. If C-reinforced blades grow, longer lead-times required. Steel Predominant in heavy engineering, high recycled component. World steel suppliers & manufacturers need new markets – ready-made facilities Steel and/or concrete 1044\BT\## 16
Making use of existing skills and facilities Sif Shipyard, Holland A2Sea, Nysted Isleburn, Scotland Burmeister & Wain Shipyard, Denmark 1044\BT\## 17
Investment: future • On average, would require €14-24 Billion per year capital investment (wind is capital intensive) • SeaWind Europe would represent a significant proportion of all project finance deals, but is comparable to the scale of investment in energy sectors. • New finance structures (for wind sector) for offshore wind? • Other sectors have momentum. There needs to be a “belief” that there will always be a market for offshore wind. • A clear role for institutional banks to bridge some of the investment gaps 1044\BT\## 18