64 comments on The First Ever Off-Shore Wind Farm Financed by Banks...
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64 comments on The First Ever Off-Shore Wind Farm Financed by Banks...
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GAIA Host Collective
1) what is status/climate of these type of bank financings for large wind in US (offshore)
and
2) to finance such a project, does the bank/utility do a risk adjusted view of electricity flows based on a certain discrete timeframe? In other words, do the terms of a project get better if the wind fits nicely into an electricity portfolio, adjusted for shortfall risk? Or is it just looked at in MW potential itself, and the other componenets of the affected electricity grid are viewed exogenously?
Here in the US, the PPAs for wind are getting harder to obtain because of the second point you mentioned - the management of the intermittancy - which has become a burden for the local utility. I took that the structure you described took these burdens and mitigated them through the cash sweep mechanisms and guarantees...did they not?
Does the Vestas guarantee only cover low availability caused by mechanical failures rather than lack of wind? If so, does the contingent equity cover the risk of intermittancy and the utility's other generation steps in? do the cash sweep mechanisms true up in times of no wind? or is this site lucky to have a high capacity factor?
Very interesting stuff, would love to learn more and figure how to apply and solve the intermittant issue over the pond here in the US.
Intermittancy has to be managed outside the project; it's too much of a burden for a single project.
There is never any coverage for lack of wind. We rely on statistical analysis and cover ratios that protect us even if you have a low wind year - that's true onshore as well.
I have a friend with a finance degree who works for the insurance industry and finds interesting places to invest the money. He has helped finance 2 wind farms in the U.S. via bond issues. My limited understanding is that there are commercial bonds generated by companies that are underwritten by a variety of insurance and other industries that want return on investment. The bonds then pay back at a fixed rate of return. Very nice for insurance companies that want steady returns but don't want to rely on banks or the stock market. The wind farms themselve were put up by utility companies and they obtained financing via the bonds from a number of entities pooling the money. The farms were on the order of 150-250 megawatt in the midwest. These are 150-250 1 megawatt turbines on ridges and wind corridors.
So I think the money is there but maybe not as concentrated as the European banks.