EDP unit prevents zero coal power in Spain

  • Spanish Market: Electricity
  • 17/09/19

Portuguese utility EDP's 562MW Abono 2 facility in Asturias was the only one of 25 individual coal-fired power units in mainland Spain to operate during several days of May, effectively preventing the country from reaching a historic coal output of zero as happened in the UK.

And rather than economics, it was technical issues — particularly constraints in the distribution network in a region heavy with electro-intensive industries — that was the main explanation for the resilience of coal in the Spanish mix, even at times of deeply negative margins for the technology.

Coal-fired generation in peninsular Spain reached only 343GWh in May — or an hourly average of just 461MW — which at the time was the lowest for any month since at least January 1990, according to historical data from power grid operator REE. That record low was narrowly beaten in August, at 341GWh.

The May low came amid higher wind and solar power output, and as gas-fired generation displaced a substantial share of coal from the generation mix as a result of firmer EU emissions trading system (ETS) prices, low European gas hub prices, and the removal of the "green cent" tax on gas-fired generation in Spain from October 2018.

Day-ahead clean dark spreads for a 38pc-efficient coal plant were actually positive for a number of days in May. But they were consistently at discounts above €10/MWh to corresponding clean spark spreads for a 55pc gas efficiency, based on day-ahead power prices on Iberian exchange Omie, PVB prices on the Mibgas exchange, and Argus assessments of API 2 coal swaps and EU ETS allowances (see chart).

Coal-fired output reached daily hourly averages below 300MW on nine days in May, and the entire output in eight of these days came exclusively from Abono 2, REE figures show. The grid operator only publishes generation data per individual unit 90 days after actual dates.

Separate data from Iberian power exchange Omie — also released with a 90-day lag — showed Abono 2 managed to consistently enter the day-ahead pool market in May. But in most days of that month, only 683MWh from that unit — an hourly average of 28.5MW — made it to the day-ahead basic schedule with competitive offers in hours 1-3.

Such offers were only possible because the unit would already be operating in the evenings to deal with technical constraints in the distribution grid. It could therefore offer power in the day-ahead market at very low prices — even below cost — for the first few hours of the following day, as it would necessarily generate electricity even when ramping down production.

Daily operating schedules

REE's day-ahead basic schedule, called PBF, is the result of Iberian power exchange Omie's pool — whose bidding period closes at 10:00 local time — and the inclusion of bilateral contracts and scheduled output from subsidised renewable units reported by market participants.

A subsequent programme, called the provisional daily viable schedule (PVP), includes changes to the base daily operating schedule as a result of technical constraints — mainly issues in the transmission or distribution grids, as well as insufficient amounts of reserve capacity for the ancillary services market. Generation units that solve the technical constraints are duly compensated, at values calculated by REE.

In all of the days in May when Abono 2 was the sole coal unit operating in mainland Spain, its PBF schedule was only 683MWh — 252MWh in hour 1, 251MWh in hour 2 and 180MWh in hour 3 — while PVP volumes were much higher, ranging from close to 3,000MWh to over 6,500MWh. Final output figures were even higher because of additional volumes from deviation management mechanisms and ancillary services (see table).

EDP said the electricity system typically requires the existence of power plants close to zones with strong industrial activity such as the region where Abono 2 is located in Spain's northwestern Asturias, which explains why this unit regularly operates in the market.

"The sharp drop in spot gas prices, together with the high CO2 prices and the environmental tax on coal consumption, meant that practically only gas-fired power plants operated in the Spanish electricity system this summer," the company said.

"The exception is [coal] plants that must operate for reasons external to the daily market, as is the case with Abono 2, and which did so due to supply security technical restrictions," it said.

Abono 2 only entered the PBF schedule with small volumes in hours 1-3 in most days of May because a coal-fired plant usually needs between one and three hours to fully stop. "It's an almost mandatory operation, so offers can be usually made below cost when a unit operated the previous day," EDP said.

The resilience of Spanish coal power in May contrasted with the situation in the UK, a country that shares many similarities with Spain in its generation mix. The UK registered 18 consecutive days without any coal-fired power output between mid-May and early June this year, a new record since 1882. Coal output averaged only 28MW in May.

High efficiency, low start-up costs

But beyond solving technical constraint imbalances, Abono 2 is one of the most efficient coal-fired plants in Spain, which also contributes to it regularly being in the market, EDP said.

It is located around just 2km from the El Musel port in Gijon, where it receives its coal imports. And it is even closer to an ArcelorMittal steelmaking plant whose industrial gases are also used to produce electricity.

"And since it is operating almost every day, it has the advantage of not having to integrate start-up costs, which allows it to be on several occasions very competitive among coal plants in Spain," the firm said.

Abono 2 was the coal-fired unit with the highest utilisation rate in Spain last year, followed by Spanish utility Endesa's two Litoral de Almeria units, REE data show (see table).

Early last year, EDP converted one of Abono 2's furnaces to run on natural gas instead of fuel oil, which cut its sulphur and carbon dioxide emissions, shortened start-up times and increased efficiency.

Before that, Abono 2 was the first coal-fired unit in Spain to be fitted with nitrogen oxide (NOx) reduction technology to meet EU emissions standards.

The unit will be one of the few Spanish coal facilities to continue operating after stricter emissions rules take effect from July 2020 — and in fact it could operate until at least 2030.

EDP said Abono 2 would continue to operate "as long as market competitiveness justifies it". It declined to disclose the unit's nominal thermal efficiency.

REE did not reply to queries on the technical constraints. The company had planned a series of investments to generally tackle technical constraints in Asturias for the 2015-20 period, but it was unclear whether any of them would help minimise the issues that frequently make Abono 2 necessary to the Spanish system.

Even though generation data per individual unit is only published 90 days after actual dates, preliminary figures show that only Asturias registered coal-fired power generation on several days in August. Besides Abono 2 and the smaller 342MW Abono 1, Asturias also hosts EDP's 346MW Soto de la Ribera 3, Iberdrola's 348MW Lada 4, and Naturgy's 154MW Narcea 2 and 347MW Narcea 3 units.

Iberdrola and Naturgy have requested the closure of all their coal-fired plants and have been waiting for final governmental approval.

As with Abono 2, EDP has already completed environmental works to continue operating Soto de la Ribera. But the company is yet to decide about the future of Abono 1, which could include converting it to a gas-fired operation or continuing to run it post-2020 but for a limited number of hours.

Taken as a single plant with a combined capacity of 904MW, Abono 1 and 2 represented 83.5pc of EDP's 5.95TWh of coal output in Spain last year. Soto de la Ribera 3 accounted for the remaining 982GWh of generation in the country. EDP's coal-fired production in Spain last year was down by almost 20pc from 7.42TWh in 2017.

EDP produced 8.06TWh of coal-fired power in Portugal in 2018, down from 9.42TWh in the previous year.

The Portuguese utility has installed coal-fired capacity of 1.22GW in Spain and 1.18GW in Portugal. Its coal fleet was available for 93pc of the time in Spain last year and 94pc in Portugal.

Peninsular Spain's coal-fired plants — 2018GWh
Capacity (MW)OutputHours workingUtilisation rate*
Abono 2 5623,3067,60977.6
Litoral de Almería 1 5583,6127,74876.3
Litoral de Almería 2 5623,3417,22770.6
Puentes 1 3512,1257,20469.5
Los Barrios5703,0097,58169.3
Puentes 4 3511,9056,39767.0
Puentes 3 3501,9756,55665.4
Puentes 2 3511,9516,98065.0
Abono 1 3421,6606,34457.3
Puentenuevo 3 3009084,07356.1
Meirama 5572,3515,18152.2
Lada 4 3481,2054,23443.6
Teruel 1 3521,0884,93840.1
Teruel 2 3529964,53536.7
Teruel 3 3518573,83034.2
Soto de la Ribera 3 3469823,92332.7
Compostilla 3 3238873,38032.6
La Robla 2 3558192,89231.9
Compostilla 5 3417252,76824.7
Guardo 2 3424151,42014.5
Narcea 3 3473321,26812.0
Anllares**3472331,0278.4
Compostilla 4 3412129747.7
Narcea 2 15400NA
Guardo 1 143-30NA
La Robla 1 264-100NA
Total9,56234,8824,70345.3
*"Utilisation rate" is the ratio between actual output and the maximum output the plant could have reached if running at full capacity in all the hours it was available
**The Anllares plant was permanently closed late last year
Abono 2 — May 2019 output*MWh
DayPBFPVPPeninsular Spain's output
5 May 196832,9166,794
6 May 196835,5656,984
8 May 196836,4077,035
11 May 196833,8886,879
12 May 196832,9166,942
18 May 196835,4446,952
25 May 196836,6287,023
26 May 196835,1666,596
*On days when Abono 2 was the only coal unit to operate in peninsular Spain

Spanish day-ahead clean spark vs dark spreads €/MWh

Related news posts

Argus illuminates the markets by putting a lens on the areas that matter most to you. The market news and commentary we publish reveals vital insights that enable you to make stronger, well-informed decisions. Explore a selection of news stories related to this one.

02/05/24

Battery storage stands out in Japan clean power auction

Battery storage stands out in Japan clean power auction

Osaka, 2 May (Argus) — Japan's first auction for long-term zero emissions power capacity has attracted strong bidding interest with a plan to install battery storage, as investment in the power storage system is gaining momentum in line with expanded use of fluctuating renewable energy sources. Japan launched the clean power auction system from the April 2023-March 2024 fiscal year, aiming to spur investment in clean power sources by securing funding for fixed costs in advance to drive the country's decarbonisation by 2050. The first auction, which was held in January, has awarded 1.1GW capacity for battery storage, or 27pc of total contract capacity for clean power sources, excluding gas-fired generation that has been temporally included in the auction system to help ensure stable power supplies, nationwide transmission system operator Organisation for Cross-regional Co-ordination of Transmission Operator (Occto), which manages the auction, said on 26 April. Bidding capacity for battery storage totalled around 4.6GW, the highest volume among any other clean power sources. This means the contract ratio for storage batteries was 24pc compared with the 100pc ratio for ammonia co-firing, hydrogen co-firing , biomass dedicated and nuclear capacity, along with gas-fired capacity . Awarded capacity for battery storage as well as pumping-up electric power facilities reached 1.67GW, exceeding the 1GW sought by the auction. Japan has secured a total of 9.77GW of net zero capacity through the 2023-24 auction. Contract volumes covered 1.3GW of nuclear, 199MW biomass, 577MW of pumping-up electric power, 770MW for ammonia co-firing and 55.3MW hydrogen co-firing, as well as 1.1GW of battery storage. This also included 5.76GW of gas-fired projects. All winners under the auction can generally receive the money for 20 years through Occto, which collect money from the country's power retailers, although they need to refund 90pc of other revenue. The first auction saw total funding of ¥233.6bn/yr ($1.51bn) for decarbonisation power sources and ¥176.6bn/yr for gas-fired capacity. Japan's battery requirements are expected to continue rising, with uncertainty over future nuclear availability likely to spur Tokyo to accelerate the roll-out of renewable energy to meet a 46pc greenhouse gas emissions reduction by 2030-31 against 2013-14 levels — a target still far above the 23pc recorded in 2022-23. Japan will need to install 38-41GW of renewable capacity, nearly triple actual output of 14GW in 2019. Japan is looking to establish lithium-ion battery production capacity of 150GWh/yr domestically and 600GWh/yr globally by 2030. The trade and industry ministry projects the latter target will require 380,000 t/yr of lithium, 310,000 t/yr of nickel, 600,000 t/yr of graphite, 60,000 t/yr of cobalt and 50,000 t/yr of manganese. By Motoko Hasegawa Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Australia issues offshore wind feasibility licences


02/05/24
02/05/24

Australia issues offshore wind feasibility licences

Sydney, 2 May (Argus) — The Australian federal government has issued the first feasibility licences for offshore wind projects in the country following a competitive process, for up to 12GW of capacity off the coast of Gippsland in the southern state of Victoria and a potential further 13GW in the next stage. Six projects have received approval to explore the feasibility of offshore wind farms in the Bass Strait off Gippsland's coast, which was the first offshore wind zone declared in Australia at the end of 2022. Successful applicants include Danish investment firm Copenhagen Infrastructure Partners (CIP), Danish utility Orsted, Australian utility AGL Energy, European utilities EDP Renewables and Engie and Japanese utility Jera. The government also intends to grant another six licences, subject to consultation with First Nations groups. The 12 projects could have a potential combined capacity of around 25GW, the government said ( see table ). Projects that prove feasible will be able to apply for commercial licences and move to the construction phase if they secure financing, with the most advanced wind farms expected to start generating power in the early 2030s. CIP secured site exclusivity to develop two projects with a combined 4.4GW through a newly launched platform company Southerly Ten. The projects comprise the 2.2GW Star of the South, which claims to be the most advanced offshore wind project in Australia , along with the early stage 2.2GW Kut-Wut Brataualung. Southerly Ten is also developing the Destiny Wind project in Australia's second declared offshore wind zone off the Hunter region in New South Wales. Orsted was given one licence for a 2.8GW project and might receive another one for a 2GW wind farm. It said it will proceed with site investigations, environmental assessments and supply chain development, with a view to bid in future auctions planned by the Victorian government, which are expected to start in late 2025. Victoria is targeting 2GW of offshore wind capacity by 2032 and 9GW by 2040. "Subject to the above steps and a final investment decision, the projects are expected to be completed in phases from the early 2030s, with the aim to maximise dual site synergies through shared resources and economies of scale," Orsted said. The 2.5GW Gippsland Skies offshore wind project, belongs to a consortium made of Irish renewables firm Mainstream Renewable Power with 35pc, UK-based firm Reventus Power 35pc, AGL Energy 20pc and Australian developer Direct Infrastructure 10pc. The first phase of the project is expected to be operational in 2032, according to the consortium. The list of six projects already granted feasibility licences also include High Sea Wind, a proposed 1.28GW wind farm developed by EDP Renewables' and Engie's 50:50 joint venture Ocean Winds, along with Blue Mackerel North, a 1GW development by Japanese utility Jera Nex's subsidiary Parkwind. Parkwind is also developing another offshore wind project in Australia, with Australian utility Alinta Energy, the 1GW Spinifex in the Southern Ocean off Victoria, which was declared Australia's third wind zone in March. The other projects that might receive licences are being developed by companies such as Spanish utility Iberdrola, Spanish developer Bluefloat Energy, Australian firm Macquarie's wind developer Corio Generation, German utility RWE and a joint venture between Australia's Origin Energy and UK-based developer RES Group. By Juan Weik Australian offshore wind projects with feasibility licences Developer Capacity Licence Orsted Offshore Australia 1 Orsted 2.8 Granted Gippsland Skies Consortium* 2.5 Granted Star of the South Southerly Ten 2.2 Offered Kut-Wut Brataualung Southerly Ten 2.2 Granted High Sea Wind Ocean Winds 1.3 Granted Blue Mackerel North Parkwind 1.0 Granted Aurora Green Iberdrola 3.0 Under consultation Great Eastern Offshore Wind Corio Generation 2.5 Under consultation Gippsland Dawn Bluefloat Energy 2.1 Under consultation Orsted Offshore Australia 2 Orsted 2.0 Under consultation Navigator North Origin Energy, RES 1.5 Under consultation Kent Offshore Wind RWE N/A Under consultation Source: federal government, companies *Mainstream Renewable Power, Reventus Power, AGL, Direct Infrastructure Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

US gas industry pins hopes on AI power demand


01/05/24
01/05/24

US gas industry pins hopes on AI power demand

New York, 1 May (Argus) — US natural gas producers and pipelines have pivoted almost in unison this year to talking up what they see as one of the strongest bullish cases for gas this decade: surging electricity demand from yet-to-be-built data centers to power artificial intelligence software. EQT, the largest US gas producer by volume, in an investor presentation last week called growing data center demand the "cornerstone" to the "natural gas bull case." Combining its own research with data from the US Energy Information Administration, the gas giant forecast an increase in gas demand of 10 Bcf/d (283mn m3/d) by 2030 to generate electricity, mostly to run data centers. Its more aggressive data center build-out scenario envisions a whopping 18 Bcf/d increase in gas demand through 2030. Total US gas production is currently about 100 Bcf/d. Kinder Morgan, one of the largest US gas pipeline operators, this month forecast 20pc of US power being gobbled up by data centers in 2030, up from a 2.5pc share in 2022. Cobbling together projections from several consultancies and financial advisories, the company said the electricity needed to run artificial intelligence software alone will comprise 15pc of US power demand by 2030. If just 40pc of that demand is met by gas, that would represent an increase in gas demand of 7-10 Bcf/d, it said. This is roughly in line with the high end of US bank Tudor Pickering Holt's forecast for gas demand to power data centers through 2030 (1.3-8.5 Bcf/d) and well above Goldman Sachs' and consultancy Enverus' projections of 3.3 Bcf/d and 2 Bcf/d, respectively. New tech, old problems Separating the wide ranges of these projections is the highly speculative nature of forecasting demand years into the future for competing energy sources to power next-generation technology. But the major upside and downside risks, analysts say, concern the more humdrum challenges of permitting and building out energy infrastructure. Goldman Sachs expects 28GW, or 60pc, of the generation capacity needed to power new data centers through 2030 will come from natural gas — 9GW from combined cycle gas turbines and 19GW from gas peaker plants. But with an average lag of four years from the time a gas transmission project is announced to the time it enters service, to say nothing of the high probability of litigation being brought by environmentalists and landowners, construction and permitting timelines are "the most top of mind constraint for natural gas," the bank said. Indeed, litigation and opposition from state regulators have ultimately led developers to call off several interstate pipeline projects in the eastern US in recent years. The exception to the rule, Equitrans' 2 Bcf/d Mountain Valley Pipeline is moving forward only because congressional action allowed it to bypass federal permitting hurdles. This is a particular problem for the gas industry's hopes of exploiting the data center boom, as a large share of future data centers are slated to be built in the southeast US, far from the major US gas fields. New data centers representing 2 Bcf/d of gas demand in Georgia probably requires a new pipeline into the southeast, FactSet senior energy analyst Connor McLean said. Southeast premium A significant data-center buildout in the southeast without new pipelines could put upward pressure on regional gas prices, McLean said. This could exacerbate the effects of what has become perhaps the most prominent bullish case for US gas: a massive build-out of LNG export terminals along the US Gulf coast. With new export terminals pulling increasing volumes of gas south along the Transcontinental gas pipeline to super-chill and ship overseas in the coming years, the build-out in data centers will likely produce "an even bigger deficit in that southeast (gas) market," EQT chief financial officer Jeremy Knop told investors last week. "We think that market really, in time, becomes the most premium market in the country," he said. By Julian Hast Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Mitsui makes delayed exit from Paiton power project


01/05/24
01/05/24

Mitsui makes delayed exit from Paiton power project

Tokyo, 1 May (Argus) — Japanese trading house Mitsui completed on 30 April the ¥109bn ($690mn) sale of its stake in Indonesia's 2,045MW Paiton coal-fired power plant in east Java following multiple delays. Mitsui originally tried to complete its exit by the end of March 2022 . It said the procedures with Paiton's offtaker Indonesian state-owned power firm Persero took more time than expected without providing further details. Japanese thermal power producer Jera withdrew from Paiton by selling its 14pc share in 2021. Mitsui sold its 45.515pc share in Paiton Energy, as well as a 45.515pc stake in Netherlands-based subsidiary Minejesa Capital and a 65pc stake in Singapore-based IPM Asia that are related companies of the Paiton project. Mistui sold the stakes to RH International (RHIS), which is a Singapore-based subsidiary of Thai power producer Ratch, and Indonesian power company Medco Daya Abadi Lestari's subsidiary Medco Daya Energi Sentosa (MDES). Paiton Energy is now owned by RHIS, MDES and Qatar-based company Nebras Power. Mitsui did not disclose their ownership ratios. Paiton consists of the 615MW No.7, 615MW No.8 and the 815MW No.3 units, which sell electricity to Persero through an unspecified long-term contract. Mitsui now holds 9.6GW of power capacity assets globally, with 8pc being coal-fired projects. The exit from Paiton cut its coal-fired ratio by 8 percentage points, while raising its renewable ratio by 3 percentage points to 32pc. Growing global pressure against coal-fired power generation likely prompted Mitsui to exit Paiton. Energy ministers from G7 countries this week pledged to accelerate "efforts towards the phase-out of unabated coal power generation". By Nanami Oki Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Italian April power imports drop on NTC restrictions


30/04/24
30/04/24

Italian April power imports drop on NTC restrictions

London, 30 April (Argus) — Italian net electricity imports fell to their lowest in more than a year in April owing to significant constraints in net transfer capacity (NTC) from France to Italy, supporting an increase in domestic generation. Net imports averaged 4.7GW in April, down from 7GW in March and well below 6.7GW in the same month last year, according to data from Italian transmission system operator Terna. This was the country's tightest net importing position for any month since August. Italian imports from France saw the largest year-on-year decline, averaging 1.5GW compared with 2.7GW in April last year. This was Italy's lowest net imports since August 2022. Imports from Switzerland also fell on the year, declining by 500MW to 2.3GW, the lowest since August last year ( see chart ). The steep drop in imports to Italy's north zone is largely a result of significant reduction in the available NTC on France's eastern borders. Since early March, strong commercial exports through all of France's eastern borders, combined with low availability of the French power grid because of planned and unplanned outages, have led to "an extremely tense situation" for the French transmission system, the country's grid operator RTE has said. These factors have led to soaring physical flows and security issues on some interconnectors on the France-Switzerland and France-Italy borders. RTE on 5 March reduced the day-ahead NTC on the France-Italy border from a scheduled 4.5GW to 1.6GW, but the measure proved "insufficient to mitigate operational issues", RTE said. The overloads, although close to the France-Italy border, were induced by high commercial exports on all of France's eastern borders, including those with Belgium and Germany. RTE consequently applied additional safety measures to guarantee the operational security of the grid, such as lowering the NTC on the France-Switzerland border from 2.5GW to 2GW. Export constraints have resulted in French prices remaining at a significant discount to Italy, with the French spot index delivering at an average discount of €59.13/MWh in April compared with €35.37/MWh in March and €28.61/MWh in April last year. And falling Italian imports have driven a 2GW year-on-year increase in domestic generation to 24.6GW in April, while Italian power demand has remained virtually stable at 28.8GW. Minimum temperatures in Milan averaged 6.6°C on 1-30 April, up from 5.3°C in March and above 5.7°C in April last year. RTE is expecting some NTC curtailments until the beginning of May and from August to mid-October, it said. By Timothy Santonastaso Italian imports by country GW Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Business intelligence reports

Get concise, trustworthy and unbiased analysis of the latest trends and developments in oil and energy markets. These reports are specially created for decision makers who don’t have time to track markets day-by-day, minute-by-minute.

Learn more