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Gabriella Pal. Hungarian Energy Office. 2. Outline. Current support schemeFurther potential for price supportMajor issues relating ratification of 2001/77/EC DirectiveConclusions. Gabriella Pal. Hungarian Energy Office. 3. Current support scheme and price regulation. Feed-in obligationSingle (n
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1. Obstacles and potential for grid connected RES-E implementation in Hungary Gabriella Pál
Hungarian Energy Office
REPROMO Seminar
Budapest
18. October 2003.
2. Gabriella Pal Hungarian Energy Office 2 Outline Current support scheme
Further potential for price support
Major issues relating ratification of 2001/77/EC Directive
Conclusions
3. Gabriella Pal Hungarian Energy Office 3 Current support scheme and price regulation Feed-in obligation
Single (non-differentiated) price
Peak: 24 HUF/kWh
Off-peak: 15 HUF/kWh
Price support cross-financed by captive and free-market electricity customers (as a surplus to system charge)
4. Gabriella Pal Hungarian Energy Office 4 Legal reference Act on Electricity No. 110/2001.
Ministerial Decree No. 56/2002.
Legal context of price setting: secondary legislation by the Minister of Economy
annual review until 2010
Indexation by CPI forecast of Central Bank
no efficiency factor of <0 applied
Competing with CHP
5. Gabriella Pal Hungarian Energy Office 5 Technical requirements of grid connection Ministerial Decree No. 47/2002: Secondary legislation by the Minister of Economy on technical and financial requirements
Grid Code: further enforceable technical standards for connection and disconnection criteria – supervised by the Independent System Operator, dispute settling by the Hungarian Energy Office
Download: http://www.mavir.hu/magyar/uzemi_szabalyzat.html
6. Gabriella Pal Hungarian Energy Office 6 Eligibility of RES-E to support Feed-in obligation AND price premium
Eligible renewable sources:
wind, solar, geothermal, biomass, biogas, hydro
Lower capacity threshold: 0.1MW
Excluded technologies:
waste incineration
Feed in obligation WITHOUT price premium
hydro >5MW
7. Gabriella Pal Hungarian Energy Office 7 Potential for further price increase on an avoided external-cost basis EU-ExternE principles + methodology
Result for RES-E: 22.80 – 24.61 HUF/kWh
~ 100 euro/MWh (peak and off-peak averge)
Total price (market price plus price support)
Indifferent of support instrument (direct tariff support or indirect market mechanism, like TGC)
This is a social no-regret price, it constitutes no support in the welfare-economist’s sense of the terminology: at this price the society is breaking even – paying equal for RES-E and conventional
8. Gabriella Pal Hungarian Energy Office 8 Estimated supply effects in the Hungarian RES-E market HUF/kWh technology GWh GWh
accumulated
12,00 hydro 40 40
12,40 - 14,00 waste incineratn. 90 130
14,00 - 16,00 sewage gas 110 240
16,00 - 17,00 waste gasifictn. 140 380
17,00 - 24,00 wind power 477 857
9. Gabriella Pal Hungarian Energy Office 9 Estimated supply effects Current share of RES-E:
Supply as of total electricity consumption: 0.3%
Cost as of total electricity account: 0.65%
Estimated effect of avoided-cost based price support scheme:
Supply as of total electricity consumption: 2.7%
Cost as of total electricity account: 4.28%
10. Gabriella Pal Hungarian Energy Office 10 Compliance with EU Guidelines „...have to use a method of calculation that is internationally recognised, ... and the amount of the aid thus granted to the renewable energy producer must not ecxeed EUR 0.05 per kWh.” (Article 63.)
market price: 10.93 HUF/kWh
+ 11.87 HUF/kWh (<0.05 EUR) = 22.80
+ 13.68 HUF/kWh (>0.05 EUR) = 24.61
11. Gabriella Pal Hungarian Energy Office 11 Recent boom in biomass Coal power plants face stringent environmental regulations
Full fuel switch to natural gas or biomass
Co-firing of biomass with coal
Agricultural production quota for arable lands has been cut during EU accession negotiations
Approx. 1 million hectare, 1/3 of all arable land will be left without production quota
Huge potential for energy crops and biomass plantations
12. Gabriella Pal Hungarian Energy Office 12 Implementing Directive 77. Definitions: „hydro”
Is a hydro plant over 5 MW capacity producing renewable electricity? Existing definition in Hungarian legislation is in conflict with the Directive.
Large scale hydro is dominating RES-E in countries of Central and Eastern Europe
Mostly existing installations
13. Gabriella Pal Hungarian Energy Office 13 Renewable electricity by country and technology (GWh, 2000)
14. Gabriella Pal Hungarian Energy Office 14 Implementing Directive 77. Definitions: „waste”
Is the designated authority liable to decide about implementing conflicting waste definitions by national vs. community legislation, energy vs. waste legislation?
Is GoO under Article 5 to be seen as a form of support under Article 4? Shall GoO be issued for non-separarted municipal waste?
Shall utilization of non-biodegredable but separated waste for energy production be supported?
15. Gabriella Pal Hungarian Energy Office 15 Further eligibility issues of RES-E In Hungarian legislation all RES-E is eligible to feed-in obligation but not all RES-E definition is eligible to price support
Lower capacity threshold:
Directive: no.
Hungary: 0.1MW<
Excluded technologies:
Directive: incineration of non-separated waste
Hungary: all waste incineration
16. Gabriella Pal Hungarian Energy Office 16 National indicative targets Most new MS have lower share of RES-E than EU-15. If large hydro is to become non-eligible: RES-E is next to zero.
The EU-15 used to have 13.9% of RES-E in 1997 and decided a 59% of average increase over 13 years. The same exercise for Hungary would result an increase from an optimistic 1% in 2004 to 1.59% by 2017, or, alternatively, 1.3% by 2010.
EU-Hungary Copenhagen Treaty: 3.5%
17. Gabriella Pal Hungarian Energy Office 17 Existing RES-E capacities in new MSs
18. Gabriella Pal Hungarian Energy Office 18 Support schemes External costs of non-renewable electricity not fully shifted to producers
New LCP Directive not implemented yet
further cost increase to come for non-RES-E
on social welfare basis RES-E provides avoidance of external costs: it justifies higher fix prices
‘Unbundling’of RES-E and CHP support seems to be necessary
19. Gabriella Pal Hungarian Energy Office 19 Guarantee of origin System of GoO not implemented yet
Very similar data requirements enacted
Calorific Value of biomass is self-reported at time of purchase along with changes is stock
Issues not addressed yet:
Verification
Storage related loss of CV (storage time and condition)
Calorific value is not sufficient for accurate calculations
Net heat rate is critical: kJ/kWh
Benchmark values and on-site supervision
20. Gabriella Pal Hungarian Energy Office 20 Guarantee of origin Hybrid plants (biomass+fossil fuel)
„A GoO shall specify the energy source from which the electricity was produced, specifying the dates and places of production (Article 5.)”
Ex-post or ex-ante
Exact volumes of RES-E from co-firing
Relative net heat rate of co-fired fuels
21. Gabriella Pal Hungarian Energy Office 21 Conclusions Definitions to be further clarified for hydro and waste
New RES-E sector yet to come
Focus on biomass, large potential
Co-firing and hybrid technologies seem to take a lead
Make sure to preserve higher priority of RES-E over CHP-E along the legislative changes
An EU-driven sector
Domestic customers’ electricity expenditure is high, willingness to pay for RES-E is low
Common internal market for RES-E may emerge
Large export potential after EU accession
Price support must focus on viable RES-E
22. Gabriella Pal Hungarian Energy Office 22 Thank you for your attention Gabriella PÁL
Hungarian Energy Office
Department of Economic Research and Environmental Protection
tel - fax: 36-1-4597747
email: palg@eh.gov.hu