1 / 12

Wind Energy: Challenges & Opportunities

Wind Energy: Challenges & Opportunities. ELFA Financial Institutions Conference April, 2007 David A. Drescher V.P.- John Deere Wind Energy http://www.johndeere.com/windenergy. Project Finance Structure.

haru
Download Presentation

Wind Energy: Challenges & Opportunities

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Wind Energy:Challenges & Opportunities ELFA Financial Institutions Conference April, 2007 David A. Drescher V.P.- John Deere Wind Energy http://www.johndeere.com/windenergy

  2. Project Finance Structure • Characteristics are similar to large ticket leasing or project finance, with a keyexception: • “Active” investor requirement to secure Sec. 45 Production Tax Credit • Equity portion 20-40% • Debt portion- 60-80% possible • No definite rating agency guidance • Cash flows driven by a variable resource- Wind! • Operating risks: • WTG Technologies – Operation & Maintenance

  3. Wind Resource Site & permits Wind Turbines Successful Project Energy Rates Investor Key Success Factors

  4. Major Wind Players • #1 U.S. with 2,700MW+ installed; 44 wind farms in 15 states • Generated ~40% of the total wind energy in US in ‘04 • More than 830MW of wind capacity installed • Goal of 2,300MW by 2010 • Building ~400MW wind power facility in IA in’06-7 • Will serve retail customers in IA, IL, and SD • Shell WindEnergy constructed a 162 MW wind farm in CO •  PPM Energy is an equal partner in the venture • One of the world’s leading wind turbine suppliers •  7,000+ turbines installed, 5,600+MW of capacity Others include Horizon/GS, BP, European players, and Utilities

  5. WTG Technology Basics • Wind turbine consists of standard components: • 3 rotor blades • Main-shaft • Gearbox • Induction generator • Computer controlled • 70-80 meter tower A complex machine system

  6. Global Turbine Manufacturers Top Three account for nearly 70% of the world market share Other OEM’s are entering market or gaining share

  7. Challenges & other issues • Turbine Procurement • Suitable for project site and wind regime • Global supply shortage • Technical due diligence • Wind Assessment • Measurement vs. Modeling • Wind data collection & analysis • Siting assessment • Environmental studies • Permitting • FAA & DOD

  8. Challenges & other issues • Transmission & Interconnection • Inadequate transmission availability • Arcane rules and process • Critical path today for success • Power sale arrangement • Counterparty risk • Requirements for forecasts, replacement power • Long term Power Purchase agreement • “Merchant” Structures • Hedges may be derivatives • Insurance risk management • All risk /builders risk

  9. Construction Challenges • Site related • Archeological discoveries • Unexpected soil conditions • Easement conflicts • Supply chain related • Transportation logistics • Delivery schedule • Parts delivery sequence changes • Contractor or subcontractor defaults • Equipment damage or loss • Force majeure • Weather related • Excessive wind speed or precipitation • Force majeure

  10. Wind Farm Development, Ownership & Operation Power Purchase & Retail Component Manufacture Wind Turbine Assembly Wind Turbine Procurement Debt Financing Equity Investment Maintenance Operations Project Development Wind Value chain Manufacturing Service Provider Utility Site Development

  11. Benefits • New growth area for Project Financiers- • Capital intensive projects • 5 year MACRS depreciation • Costs: ~$1.7 to 2.0 million per installed MW • Effective PTC utilization is a requirement • Equates to ~30% of project revenue • Specialized Expertise & counsel is needed • Supports domestic renewable energy production, energy independence and environmental/climate change

  12. John Deere Wind Energy • A business unit of John Deere Renewables, LLC: • Financial Services focus – no manufacturing role • Commitment to rural economic growth • Delivers benefit to Deere stakeholders • Provide debt and equity investment and successful projects through Integrated development process: • Turbine Supply • Expertise in wind energy technology & construction project management and wind farm operation

More Related