Around one in five power purchase agreements (PPAs) in France do not come to fruition, the president of electricity consumers association CLEEE, Frank Roubanovitch, told Argus during the Gazelec conference in Paris.
PPAs represent close to 20pc of CLEEE members' power supply, with the majority solar photovoltaic (PV) projects and "greenfield" PPAs — agreements with plants that have not yet been commissioned. And French demand for PPAs far exceeds supply. "It is quite hard to find any PPA offers, and when we do, they are often projects that are not secured with planning permission. Either they do not happen — which concerns 15-20pc of projects — or they are delayed by several years," Roubanovitch said on Monday.
He also pointed to high PPA prices, which rise when forward market prices are high. "The question is whether signing PPAs makes economic sense. In 10-20 years' time, there will be so much solar PV [capacity] everywhere in Europe that prices will be much cheaper than PPAs at €70-80/MWh," he said.
That view is shared among corporate buyers. "Around 10pc of PPAs are not done due to delays of development, especially in the solar PV sector," said Richard Fecamp, the director-general of SNCF Energie, a subsidiary of state-owned rail firm SNCF. Fecamp highlighted the difficulties that buyers have in diversifying supply, as two PPAs that the firm signed did not end up happening. The firm is the largest industrial power consumer in France and its maximum share of PPAs stands at 25pc.
SNCF signed a wind PPA this summer with French renewable energy supplier Voltalia, which will supply power to the firm for 25 years, following another PPA between the two in 2019. The company said it would like to sign offshore wind PPAs in the future, but assumes that they will not be available for seven to eight years.
The French state earlier this year implemented a structure providing financial guarantees for PPAs between renewable firms and industrial consumers. "This fund was a good idea but its criteria were too restrictive — it only concerned greenfield projects and for a duration of more than 10 years, while also limiting types of eligible firms," green power supplier Alterna's director-general Antonin Marcault told Argus.

