Alboran Energy Strategy Consutlatns

2023

  • Energy Musings, June 24, 2023

    Energy Musings contains articles and analyses dealing with important issues and developments within the energy industry, including historical perspective, with potentially significant implications for executives planning their companies’ future.

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    June 24, 2023

    Don’t Outlaw Private Cars, Target EV Subsidies Better

    The idea we should outlaw the ownership of private vehicles and only depend on vehicle-use services has resurfaced recently. The World Economic Forum idea was promoted last year as part of a push to create a circular economy that would reduce the need for hundreds of new critical mineral mines to supply them for the green energy transition. Recently, two studies emerged suggesting that our government’s electric vehicle subsidies and tax credits could be used more effectively to reduce carbon emissions and at a lower cost for taxpayers. We examine these analyses that focus on vehicle miles driven, household ownership of EVs, and alternative powertrains. One-size fits all government emissions policies will not work and may worsen the problem. It is time to reassess these policies. READ MORE

    Don’t Outlaw Private Cars, Target EV Subsidies Better

    We are in the Fourth Industrial Revolution claims Klaus Scwab, founder of the World Economic Forum (WEF). Therefore, we should “take dramatic technological change as an invitation to reflect about who we are and how we see the world.” Such a guiding principle is driving the green revolution, including banning internal combustion engine (ICE) vehicles because they dump tailpipe emissions into the atmosphere. We should only drive electric vehicles (EV), and they should be powered by the grid of the future fueled only by wind and solar.

    A year ago, the WEF produced a paper about building a circular economy to reduce the need for a 500% increase in critical minerals to support the green energy revolution. Buried in the paper was the idea that people should cease owning vehicles and switch to vehicle-use services. Fewer vehicles being driven more miles might help speed up the emissions reduction effort. Some commentators jumped on the WEF’s idea as a justification for banning the private ownership of vehicles, a heavy-handed government intrusion into people’s lives, as if telling the people what kind of car they may buy isn’t. Support for this idea has split along political lines.

    Subsidies Drive The EV Market

    To promote the EV-only policy, governments are slathering subsidies across the automobile industry – from tax credits and point-of-sale benefits to cash for new manufacturing and battery plants. The problem is governments seem to have overlooked the scale of the critical minerals supply chains necessary for this redo of the automobile industry, and thus how quickly such supply chains can be built. If this redo aims to cut transportation emissions, could there be a better way?

    The misnamed U.S. Inflation Reduction Act, signed into law in August 2022, created a plethora of subsidies and tax credits for individuals, states, and companies to foster renewable energy growth. The Congressional Budget Office’s initial estimate is that the bill would cost $391 billion from 2022 to 2031. Analyses by Goldman Sachs, Credit Suisse, the Mercatus Center, Americans for Tax Reform, and others have suggested that the cost will be more like $1.2-$1.4 billion over the decade, or more than three times the CBO estimate.

    The tax credits for battery production for EVs were estimated by the CBO to cost $30.6 billion. The analyses project the subsidy will cost $196.5 billion, a 540% miss! Every subsidy and tax credit estimate is too low because the CBO underestimated the volume of projects that will be eligible. In some subsidies, the projects are eligible for 10 years of payments if the projects meet construction thresholds before 2031, thus ensuring subsidy money will be flowing until possibly 2041. Can we do better with the taxpayer’s money?

    Read the full article on Energy-Musings.com »

  • Energy Musings, June 20, 2023

    Energy Musings contains articles and analyses dealing with important issues and developments within the energy industry, including historical perspective, with potentially significant implications for executives planning their companies’ future.

    Download the PDF

    June 20, 2023

    Offshore Wind Confronts A Deteriorating Market

    Last week, a show cause hearing for SouthCoast Wind was held by the RI EFSB to understand why the company wants the approval process for its transmission cables to go forward while the financial viability of the project is in doubt. SouthCoast Wind, as well as other Massachusetts, Connecticut, and New York projects, are terminating or renegotiating their power purchase agreements because the price of the electricity contracted to be sold to utilities will not finance the wind farms’ construction.

    The unfinanceable status of these wind farms arises because the power was sold on the assumption that construction costs were always declining and would continue that trend. Billions of dollars of capital have been wagered on that assumption, and now developers are looking at huge financial losses. They do not want to admit any responsibility for the financial disasters. They want to be rewarded for terminating PPAs and given reconfigured bidding procedures to save them.

    We watched the two-plus hour hearing. We analyze the issues raised, the challenges facing the market today, and how developers expect to be absolved of mismanagement. SouthCoast Wind’s CEO was the star witness, and he delivered an impressive Alfred E. Newman imitation.

    The offshore wind market is in turmoil like never before. Utility regulators face Hobson’s Choices, suggesting no one is going to be happy where the industry lands and especially its upcoming journey. Given shifting attitudes toward “green energy,” wrapping oneself in the flag of public policy may not be the answer as much as developers try. READ MORE

    Offshore Wind Confronts A Deteriorating Market

    Up and down the East Coast, offshore wind developers are waking up to find their power purchase agreements (PPA) underwater. Trying to avoid financial disasters, they are scrambling for solutions. Why the turmoil? Simple. Actual project costs are wildly off from the estimates when PPA prices were locked in. Penalties to get out of PPAs are a cheaper option, especially if you are not going to be penalized for terminating the contracts. Even the inflated renewable energy subsidies in the misnamed Inflation Reduction Act won’t save these bad deals.

    The turmoil’s magnitude was at the center of a hearing before the Rhode Island Energy Facility Sitting Board (RI EFSB) last week. SouthCoast Wind, a 1,200 megawatt (MW) project in federal waters off Rhode Island to supply nine Massachusetts utilities with clean electricity, needs the RI EFSB’s approval to land its transmission cables and allow their passage across the state to connect with the regional power grid at Brayton Point in Somerset, Massachusetts.

    The two-plus hour “show cause hearing” on June 12 had twice been rescheduled at the request of SouthCoast Wind – December 19, 2022, and February 27, 2023 – as the company’s assessment shifted from a viable project to an unfinanceable one. As the RI EFSB outlined in its show cause hearing notice, the need arose when it learned from the media on November 10, 2022, that SouthCoast Wind was requesting the Massachusetts Department of Public Utilities (MADPU) to suspend their review of the PPAs given the company’s realization the project was no longer financeable, i.e., unprofitable.

    Read the full article on Energy-Musings.com »

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