Contact Considering Hydro Project on Clutha River (Update2)
By Gavin Evans
Aug. 12 (Bloomberg)
Contact Energy Ltd., New Zealand's biggest publicly traded energy company, is reviewing options for another hydro-electric project near its dams on the South Island's Clutha River.
Contact is testing the feasibility of several projects proposed on the river by former government-owned Electricity Corp., spokesman Jonathan Hill said today. Discussions with the local community will start once a preferred option is selected.
New Zealand, a signatory to the Kyoto Protocol on climate change, gets about 70 percent of its power from non-polluting generators and wants to increase that to 90 percent by 2025 to reduce emissions. Wellington-based Contact is investing in new geothermal and wind projects and said in February it would likely announce a large hydro-electric project mid-year.
``These are reasonably big projects and they're reasonably expensive'' in capital terms, said Paul Richardson, who helps manage the equivalent of $1.6 billion at BT Funds Management in Auckland. Any proposal will face ``robust debate'' to get approved, he said.
Low operating costs and long asset lives provide increasing profits for dam owners as power prices rise. Still, public opposition to more dams on the nation's rivers is high. Government-owned Meridian Energy Ltd. abandoned a NZ$1.2 billion ($840 million) project on the Waitaki River in 2004 on doubts it could win planning approval. TrustPower Ltd. has spent three years trying to get approval for a NZ$275 million project on the Wairau River. Consents granted last week are to be challenged in court.
Cost Estimates:
In June, engineers Parsons Brinckerhoff Associates estimated the cost of building the nation's eight most-viable hydro- electric projects, including four on the Clutha River. A 340-megawatt project at Tuapeka, south of Contact's 320- megawatt Roxburgh power station, may cost as much as NZ$1.3 billion and generate power at a long-run marginal cost of NZ$78.70 a megawatt-hour, Parsons Brinckerhoff said in a report to Transpower New Zealand Ltd., operator of the country's national grid. It would flood 2,400 hectares (5,900 acres) and was the only option that may be constrained by ``significant environmental issues.''
Power cost an average NZ$54.46 a megawatt-hour in New Zealand last year, and NZ$95.89 a megawatt-hour yesterday, according to Marketplace Co. data. Parsons Brinckerhoff said a 190-megawatt project at Beaumont, north of Tuapeka and south of Roxburgh, may be as much as NZ$786 million and generate at NZ$86.80 a megawatt-hour.
Queensbury, Luggate: North of Contact's 432-megawatt Clyde dam, a 186-megawatt project near Queensbury may cost as much as NZ$831 million and deliver power at NZ$91 a megawatt-hour. Further north near Luggate, a 99-megawatt project may cost NZ$508 million and generate power at NZ$110 a megawatt-hour.
Contact, half-owned by Sydney-based Origin Energy Ltd., inherited Electricity Corp.'s development sites when it was split from the government-owned generator in 1996. Shares were offered publicly in 1999.
Contact's Hill wouldn't comment on Parsons Brinckerhoff's estimates. The company's shares fell 14 cents, or 1.6 percent, to NZ$8.55 at the 5 p.m. close of trading in Wellington.
To contact the reporter on this story: Gavin Evans in Wellington at gavinevans@bloomberg.net.
Wednesday, August 13, 2008
Mega Money
Labels:
Beaumont,
Clutha dams,
Luggate,
Megawatt Costs,
Queensberry,
Tuapeka Mouth
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