Contact’s October Power Production Drops on Low Inflows
By Gavin Evans, on Wednesday Nov 18 2009
bloomberg.com
Contact Energy Ltd., New Zealand’s biggest publicly traded power company, said generation fell 13 percent last month as low inflows and prices reduced output from its South Island dams.
Power production fell to 730 gigawatt-hours in October from 838 gigawatt-hours a year earlier, led by a 28 percent drop in output from Contact’s Clyde and Roxburgh dams. Average prices dropped to NZ$32.50 ($24) a megawatt-hour, from NZ$44.83 a year earlier, even as record cold temperatures lifted demand by 2.7 percent, the Wellington-based company said in a statement.
Contact, half-owned by Sydney-based Origin Energy Ltd., uses dams, gas-fired generators and geothermal steam fields to make power for its customers. The 432-megawatt Clyde dam, supplied by the Clutha River and Lake Hawea, is the company’s biggest plant.
“Compared to previous years, the inflows into Hawea were quite low” last month, act spokesman Jonathan Hill said in a telephone interview today. “Also, prices just didn’t warrant using storage.”
Contact fell as much as 8 cents, or 1.4 percent, to NZ$5.86. It traded at NZ$5.90 at 2 p.m. in Wellington. The benchmark Top 50 Index was 0.2 percent lower.
New Zealand gets about 60 percent of its power from dams on lakes and rivers, the largest of which are on South Island and run by Contact’s rival Meridian Energy Ltd. Power prices have doubled this month as lake levels declined to average levels for the first time in a year.
Low Inflows
Hydro-electric storage usually rises November through March as spring rain and melting snow on the nation’s Southern Alps increases inflows and allows generators to hold back water for the winter demand peak. Average inflows the past 30 days were 33 percent below normal, according to Marketplace Co. data.
“There’s no undue concern” at this stage, Meridian spokesman Alan Seay said today. “It’s the big northwesterly weather patterns that boost our inflows and we just haven’t had those yet. But it’s early days.”
Record low temperatures in many centers last month made it the coldest October since 1945, the National Institute of Water & Atmospheric Research said on Nov. 3.
Generation from Contact’s gas-fired plants fell 4.5 percent from a year earlier. The plants at Otahuhu in Auckland and at Stratford need a price above NZ$60 megawatt-hour to cover their fuel and running costs, the company said Aug. 14.
Electricity cost NZ$86.68 at Otahuhu at 1 p.m. local time, according to Marketplace Co. data. It has averaged NZ$72.42 so far this month, up from NZ$41.36 in October.
Thursday, November 19, 2009
Low Inflows Impact on Contact Energy
Labels:
Climate Change,
Contact Energy
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