Contact’s Clutha Gamble - There’ll Be A Need For More Power In A Decade
April 22nd, 2009
New Zealand Energy & Environment Business Week
• Construction not for 10 years.
• Long consultation process.
• Many ecological concerns.
The crucial factor in Contact Energy’s announcements on possible Clutha River developments is the timescale - 10 years at best before construction might even begin. This makes arguments there is no immediate need for a Clutha hydro project irrelevant. For example, Greens leader Jeanette Fitzsimons says there’s no need for big new power projects because enough is being built to cause a surplus over the next three to five years. But this is the point. What NZ does for new energy after this is the question - after the biggest geothermal opportunities are used up, any new gas supplies are much more expensive than today’s, and all the economic, consentable windfarms have been built. And given Contact’s experience in re-consenting the Clyde dam - a seven year process for an existing structure - the company is right to take the long view and start testing the waters on several Clutha options identified as long ago as the 1940s.
However, Fitzsimons is right when she points out by offering four options for dams, Contact is creating a somewhat false choice, since no new dam at all is also a possibility. For many years, proposing new hydro dams on the Clutha River was too difficult even to contemplate, such was the expected public backlash. The Clyde dam, finally completed in the early 1990s caused huge public controversy over two decades, then was blamed for flooding Alexandra in 1999. The biblical deluge wasn’t the dam’s fault, but the incident blackened Contact’s name in the town. Things only started improving when Contact and the Crown paid for massive new flood protection works.
In the meantime, Contact became a better neighbour, organised opposition to lower Clutha dams faded, and locals started complaining uncertainty caused by Contact’s ownership of large tracts of land around the possible Beaumont dam sites was stifling economic development while the rest of Central Otago was booming. The reconstituted town of Cromwell above the Clyde dam also came to be seen as a success for the area. Contact may also run the less compelling argument if there is to be any new big hydro, it would be better to build it on rivers which have already been modified - an approach which would seem to rule out new structures at Queensbury and Luggate, which are up-river on unspoilt parts of the river system.
Contact began throat-clearing last year on reviving its Clutha options, with little adverselocal reaction. However, only one of its four proposed sites has any real prospects of being built - a 185MW project 4km upstream from the township of Beaumont. While the 350MW project that could be built at Tuapeka Mouth is almost twice the size, that option would flood Beaumont, including a settlers’ graveyard, and the ecologically important Birch Island, creating perhaps too many causes for public opposition. Further upriver at Luggate and Queensbury, the river is not only unmodified, but is also a new wine-growing region and increasingly part of the Central Otago tourism scene. While linking the schemes would generate up to 246MW between them, they also appear difficult to consent compared to the upper Beaumont option. None of the Clutha options are competitive at current electricity prices.
Wednesday, April 22, 2009
Contact's Gamble
Labels:
Clutha dams,
Contact Energy,
Tuapeka Mouth
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