Ofgem today completed the second tender round of its Offshore Transmission Owner (OFTO) regime. It granted West of Duddon Sands (WoDS) Transmission plc a licence to own and operate the £269 million transmission link to the West of Duddon Sands offshore wind farm. This decision brings the total new transmission investment delivered by the OFTO regime to date to over £2.5 billion, of which nearly £1 billion has now been delivered through the capital markets.
WoDS becomes the fourth and final offshore transmission project to reach financial close and licence grant in tender round two of the regime. The second tender round has delivered £1.4 billion of transmission assets, connecting 1.9GW of offshore wind. WoDS offshore wind farm, located in the East Irish Sea approximately 14 km from the nearest coast on Walney Island, Cumbria, comprises 108 turbines with an installed capacity of 389MW.
WoDS Transmission plc is owned by Macquarie Corporate Holdings Pty Limited and 3i Infrastructure plc. It was selected by Ofgem through a competitive process, in which bidders compete to become OFTOs, and will now own and operate the link for the next 20 years. The project is supported by the EIB’s Project Bond Credit Enhancement product. This financing approach opens up investment in the OFTO regime to a wider range of investors, helping to drive down the costs for consumers of connecting offshore wind farms to the onshore grid.
Dermot Nolan, Ofgem chief executive, said: “With the licence granted for West of Duddon Sands, the OFTO regime has attracted over £2.5 billion of new investment into the UK transmission sector to date. The regulatory frameworks devised by Ofgem are key to attracting the new investment needed to extend grid networks to connect renewable energy projects, and to enable planned interconnectors with European partners to be built. This model is helping drive down costs for consumers.”
Ofgem and DECC launched the offshore transmission regime in 2009. It uses competitive tendering for licensing offshore electricity transmission systems.
There have been three tender rounds to date. All projects in tender round two have now reached financial close and been granted Offshore Transmission Owner (OFTO) licences. Financial close is where the developer completes the sale of the offshore transmission system to the OFTO. Once all the projects in the first three tender rounds have reached financial close and been granted OFTO licences, around 4.4GW of electricity will have been connected to the national grid.
Ofgem is the independent energy regulator for Great Britain. Its priority is to make a positive difference for consumers by promoting competition in the energy markets and regulating networks.
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