Largest Biomass Incinerator in the World Shuts Down

Largest Bio­mass Incin­er­a­tor in the World Shuts Down

- by Jan Hro­mad­ko, July 8, 2013. SourceEuro Investor 

RWE AG (RWE.XE) said Mon­day it has aban­doned plans to extend the oper­at­ing life of the world’s largest bio­mass-fired pow­er plant, cit­ing poor ener­gy demand, low pow­er prices and a heavy debt load for forc­ing the Ger­man util­i­ty to cut back on spending.

The 750-megawatt pow­er plant in Tilbury, locat­ed east of Lon­don on the riv­er Thames, is now expect­ed to be shut down at the end of Octo­ber, the com­pa­ny said.

The for­mer coal-fired Tilbury plant was con­vert­ed into a 100% bio­mass-fueled facil­i­ty in 2010 in antic­i­pa­tion that it could oper­ate longer than present­ly allowed under Euro­pean Union cli­mate pro­tec­tion leg­is­la­tion, known as the Large Com­bus­tion Plant Direc­tive, or LCPD.

A spokesman for RWE’s pan-Euro­pean pow­er gen­er­a­tion busi­ness said, how­ev­er, that fur­ther con­sid­er­able invest­ment would have been required to ensure the plant can oper­ate for longer. He added the deci­sion to halt this invest­ment was based on a “bun­dle of rea­sons,” includ­ing mut­ed ener­gy demand in a poor­ly per­form­ing econ­o­my and depressed pow­er prices. Both aren’t expect­ed to pick up in the short term, he said.

The com­ments come after the U.K.‘s elec­tric­i­ty reg­u­la­tor last month warned that action was need­ed to address “an unprece­dent­ed chal­lenge to secure sup­plies to consumers.”

The reg­u­la­tor, Ofgem, said elec­tric­i­ty capac­i­ty mar­gins could tight­en to between 2% and 5% in 2015–2016, depend­ing on demand, and that could increase the chance of a sup­ply dis­rup­tion, though this isn’t an immi­nent or like­ly sce­nario pro­vid­ed the indus­try man­ages the sit­u­a­tion effectively.

RWE is one of the coun­try’s six largest ener­gy sup­pli­ers with over 6.5 mil­lion cus­tomers and pro­duc­ing around 10% of the elec­tric­i­ty con­sumed in the U.K.

On top of a dif­fi­cult U.K. pow­er mar­ket, RWE is also suf­fer­ing under a heavy debt load as a result of the 2009 acqui­si­tion of Dutch util­i­ty Essent for over 7 bil­lion euros ($8.98 bil­lion). Ger­many’s 2011 deci­sion to accel­er­ate a planned nuclear exit also mas­sive­ly hit the bal­ance sheets of nuclear plant oper­a­tors in the country.

Like many of RWE’s Euro­pean peers, the com­pa­ny is fac­ing an increas­ing­ly dif­fi­cult pow­er mar­ket envi­ron­ment with a poor­ly per­form­ing econ­o­my weigh­ing on elec­tric­i­ty demand and prices.

Many util­i­ties sell their pow­er pro­duc­tion sev­er­al years ahead of phys­i­cal deliv­ery to cus­tomers, which means they are now lock­ing in pow­er prices of under EUR40 a megawatt-hour, sig­nif­i­cant­ly below the EUR55/MWh to EUR60/MWh gen­er­al­ly seen as ade­quate to run a fleet of pow­er plants over the long term.

RWE also said last month it may announce fur­ther pow­er plant clo­sures with the pub­li­ca­tion of sec­ond-quar­ter results on Aug. 16, as much of the com­pa­ny’s con­ven­tion­al pow­er plants are strug­gling to earn money.


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