SPEF: RES tariffs need to be adjusted to inflation annually

RES unit tariffs need to be adjusted annually in accordance with inflation rate changes, Stelios Loumakis, president of SPEF, the Hellenic Association of Photovoltaic Energy Producers, has told the European Commission’s Directorate-General for Energy Ditte Juul-Joergensen, who held a meeting with key domestic market players as part of her visit to Greece to take part in the ongoing Delphi Economic Forum.

A system annually adjusting guaranteed RES tariffs needs to be applied to projects from 2016 onwards, as a percentage of annual inflation, as was the case up until 2014, the SPEF chief pointed out.

This need has arisen as a result of drastically increased interest rates on loans and project development costs, as well as the impact of higher inflation, Loumakis noted.

The SPEF official also noted that power grid operator IPTO must pause issuing new RES connection offers until grid energy storage installations have commenced. RES connection offers need to be issued proportionately with the development of energy storage unit installations, Loumakis added.

To date, IPTO has issued RES connection terms totaling 25 GW, including projects already in operation, a level that already meets the country’s goal for 2030.

Loumakis also called for the removal of a cap on the remuneration of RES producers, noting its level of 85 euros per MWh, under current market conditions, is depriving the Energy Transition Fund of cash inflow.

Chinese firms barred from distribution operator sale

Conflict of interest, including in grid energy storage, a fast-growing market, has prompted power utility PPC to stop two Chinese firms interested in the prospective sale of a 49 percent stake in distribution network operator DEDDIE/HEDNO, a PPC subsidiary, from taking part.

State Grid Corporation of China (SGCC), a strategic partner of Greek power grid operator IPTO with a 24 percent stake, and another Chinese company, still undisclosed, both participated in a market test for the DEDDIE/HEDNO privatization, indicating an interest to submit bids.

A total of 19 firms reportedly expressed preliminary interest in the sale’s market test, conducted by the procedure’s consultants.

The DEDDIE/HEDNO partial privatization’s conditions include a term barring the participation of any firms directly or indirectly related to IPTO.

The conflict-of-interest term was included in the sale’s rules as electricity network companies, whether involved in high voltage, such as IPTO, or mid and low voltage, such as DEDDIE/HEDNO, are expected to find themselves competing in various electricity market services, including energy storage.

The grid energy storage market – offering large-scale storage systems that store electrical energy during times of abundance, low prices, or low demand before returning it to the grid when demand is high and electricity prices tend to be higher – is experiencing rapid growth on a global scale.

Greece still lacks a legal framework covering this domain. The energy ministry is working on this pending issue, crucial for the country’s effort to achieve National Energy and Climate Plan objectives through greater RES penetration.

This legal framework will, amongst other matters, determine market participation and remuneration terms for energy storage units, as well as related services to be traded on the energy exchange.

PPC anticipates first-round expressions of interest from four to six consortiums for the DEDDIE/HEDNO sale of a 49 percent stake.