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Power Sales from Solar Power Projects

Power Sales from Solar Power Projects. Lee M. Goodwin lgoodwin@nixonpeabody.com. Power Sales for Solar Projects. Background : Underlying philosophy of independent power Independent power is the creation of legislation PURPA State Initiatives Legislation still helps ITC RPS

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Power Sales from Solar Power Projects

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  1. Power Sales from Solar Power Projects Lee M. Goodwinlgoodwin@nixonpeabody.com

  2. Power Sales for Solar Projects • Background: Underlying philosophy of independent power • Independent power is the creation of legislation • PURPA • State Initiatives • Legislation still helps • ITC • RPS • Legislation also creates context • Voluntary vs. Involuntary purchases • Municipal purchasers

  3. Power Sales for Solar Projects • Even in the absence of legislation developers have a place because they will do what the customer either will not or cannot do for itself • Take equipment related-performance risk • Take construction risk • Timing • Quality • Development activities and development risk • Permitting • Land acquisition • Other development skills • Development teams

  4. What Do Customers Act Like They Think the Developer/Owner is Here For? • Virtual extended warranty • Equipment suppliers only provide limited warranties • PPAs with performance guarantees but without Force Majeure protection for equipment failure are difficult to distinguish from long-term equipment warranties • Make the sun shine • PPAs with minimum delivery guarantees place developers in the position of writing long-term weather and climate insurance • Significance of inadequate data

  5. What Do Customers Act Like They Think the Developer/Owner is Here For? • Change-in-law insurance • PPAs without flow through of change-in-law costs place developer in the position of writing long term change-in-law insurance • Important for thermal projects due to greenhouse concerns • Solar projects have change-in-law risk too • Operating standards • Increased taxes from local municipalities

  6. Adequate Protection for Developers/Owners If contracts do not have adequate protection for developers, developers end up playing roles that they are not suited for and that they are not compensated for • If insolation is not adequate, or if laws change, that is a cost that the ultimate customer (ratepayers or consumers), not developers or power purchasers, should carry. • The developer is not in a position to pass that cost through; the power purchaser is • Similar considerations apply to utility and commercial projects

  7. Adequate Protection for Developers/Owners Developers can assume these risks • It is a business decision, not a legal decision • Assuming this risk does not make contract unenforceable • It can raise concerns with lenders and equity providers • Developers who assume risks should be sure they are compensated • Ability to price appropriately depends on when issues come up • Issues that come up late in negotiations create “unfunded mandates”

  8. Key Take-Away Message If you are a developer/owner and you are assuming risks above and beyond the cost of producing power, make sure you are being paid for it! In other words, if you are going to be in the insurance business, make sure you collect your premium.

  9. Specific PPA Issues • Common themes • Allocation of risk • Modularity

  10. Contract Structure • Some risks are inherent in the way solar contracts are structured • For many technologies, power sales has an energy and a capacity component, but most solar PPAs are energy-only • In energy and capacity PPAs, capacity payments usually continue even if the purchaser experiences problems on its side of the delivery point unless the PPA provides otherwise • In an energy-only PPA, if the purchaser can’t take the energy for any reason, the owner won’t get paid unless there is a contractual provision that provides for payment • Eliminating capacity payment automatically shifts risk due to third party non-performance from the buyer to the seller • Capacity payments for solar facilities • Theoretical support • Actual Experience • Trend toward energy-only for other renewable technologies

  11. Specific PPA Issues • Development milestones • Intermediate milestones • Permitting • Contracting • Make whole • Commercial operation • Establishing deadline • Partial commercial operation • Bad Equipment • Zoning • Prorated damages

  12. Specific PPA Issues • Development milestones • Delays • Force Majeure • Day-for-day? • Permits • Delays by interconnecting provider • Deemed commissioning • Lost ITC • Payment for test power • Conditions precedent/subsequent • Permits/ PUC approval • Financial closing • Others

  13. Specific PPA Issues • Transmission issues (utility projects) • Practical issues • Availability • Responsibility for securing • Failure of transmission • Remedies • Lost power sales • Foregone tax credits • Balancing/scheduling issues

  14. Performance Damages • Production guarantees • Acceptability • Double dipping of penalties • Basis for guarantee • Calculating of production • (Rolling 12/24/36 month period) • Credit for excused outages • Shake-out period • Consequences • Damages • Additional equipment

  15. Performance Damages • Availability guarantees • Acceptability • Level of guarantee • Calculation of availability • (Rolling 12/24/36 month period) • Credit for excused outages • Cost of excessive monitoring • Consequences • Replacement power • Other amounts

  16. Defaults • Seller defaults • Extended cure periods for general defaults • Representations and warranties • Buyer remedies • Lifetime replacement power • Pre commercial operation vs. post commercial operation • EEI contract settlement amount • Buyer defaults • Payment default cure periods • Buyer’s failure to purchase • Energy payments • ITC Recapture • Seller remedies for buyer default • Adequacy of settlement amount

  17. Force Majeure • Misconceptions about Force Majeure • Typical Force Majeure • Act of God • Change of law • Governmental action or failure to act • Unavailability of replacement equipment • Equipment failure as Force Majeure • Virtual extended warranty • Warranty unavailable from manufacturers • Any failure or failure of properly maintained equipment • Adequacy of insurance • Full or partial Force Majeure • Termination for extended Force Majeure • Limit to material operational problems • Partial termination

  18. Assignment • Lender issues • Finance assignment • Right to replace owner • Lender assumption of obligations • Further assurances • Upstream ownership transfer as assignment

  19. Miscellaneous Issues • Limit on liability • Dollar cap on liability • Consequences of exceeding cap • ITC recapture as consequential damages • Change-in-law risk • Operating standards • Tax • Security • Cash security • Subordinated lien

  20. Miscellaneous Issues • Bidding strategies • Exceptions • Governmental vs. private bids • Generic model PPA • Municipal/governmental purchasers • Bidding requirements • Sovereign immunity

  21. Alternatives • Merchant power (utility projects) • Driven by several factors • Reluctance of utilities to contract • Desire to retain upside from RECs • Ability to hedge price for power • Build-Own-Transfer • Alternative way to monetize tax benefits: sell entire project to customer • Differences from EPC • IPP takes all development tasks, including tasks usually performed by owners • Acquire equipment • Assemble land • Secure permits

  22. Power Sales from Solar Projects Lee M. Goodwinlgoodwin@nixonpeabody.com

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