One for Mart in particular - UK Govt is proposing big changes to how the CfD auctions are structured for Round 7.
My brief simplistic reading of it is that UK govt wants now to publish a "capacity ambition" ie how many GW it wants to buy, instead of the "this is how much we've got to spend how many GW can we get" used previously
https://www.gov.uk/government/consultat ... on-round-7
Got to be more to it than that though.
https://renews.biz/100404/uk-commits-to ... t-reforms/
Changes to CfD Auctions
Changes to CfD Auctions
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Oversees an 11kWp solar array at work
Oversees an 11kWp solar array at work
Re: Changes to CfD Auctions
Thanks Dan, very interesting ...... well pretty boring I suppose. I'm certainly reading it like you.
So instead of approving schemes until their capacity at the strike price reaches the auction pot limit, they will stretch(?) the budget till capacity hits a set target. That sounds like a good idea, especially given this bit in the Gov paper:
Perhaps the failure of round 5 to attract any off-shore bids, due to the lowered max bid limit and the spike in costs (post invasion of Ukraine), has something to do with this review too.
Never say never, bvut hard to see how this new approach could lead to less RE deployment? May mean an increase in total subsidy expenditure, but in the face of 'subsidising' AGW impacts from existing FF consumption, due to their externalities, sounds like an OK trade-off to speed up RE deployment.
So instead of approving schemes until their capacity at the strike price reaches the auction pot limit, they will stretch(?) the budget till capacity hits a set target. That sounds like a good idea, especially given this bit in the Gov paper:
So I'm reading that to mean that if say 2 approved schemes are well below the pot limit, but approving a 3rd would take expenditure slightly over the pot limit (for that auction), then the 3rd scheme is dropped, despite meeting the other criteria. I'd never even thought of that before.An underspend risk can occur when an auction is comprised of a small number of large
projects. If one of these large projects bids into the contract allocation process with a bid price
that is competitive, but is ultimately in excess of the overall budget – even by a very small
amount - then this capacity will not be secured.
Perhaps the failure of round 5 to attract any off-shore bids, due to the lowered max bid limit and the spike in costs (post invasion of Ukraine), has something to do with this review too.
Never say never, bvut hard to see how this new approach could lead to less RE deployment? May mean an increase in total subsidy expenditure, but in the face of 'subsidising' AGW impacts from existing FF consumption, due to their externalities, sounds like an OK trade-off to speed up RE deployment.
8.7kWp PV [2.12kWp SSW + 4.61kWp ESE PV + 2.0kWp WNW PV]
Two BEV's.
Two small A2A heatpumps.
20kWh Battery storage.
Two BEV's.
Two small A2A heatpumps.
20kWh Battery storage.