Small Scale Hydroelectric Power Plants in Norway. Some Microeconomic and Environmental Considerations
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Some Words about the Method
3. The Norwegian Water Resources and Energy Directorate and Its Work
- Hydrology: NVE require a minimum of water in the river. This requirement is the five-percentile measured in liters per second. There is a requirement for the summer, and one for the winter season.
- The water temperature, the ice conditions and the local climate.
- The groundwater and the risk of erosion and flooding.
- The biodiversity.
- The fish and freshwater biology.
- The flora and fauna.
- The landscape.
- The cultural effects.
- The agriculture.
- The water quality and water supply.
- The interests of the indigenous people and reindeer herding.
- The societal impacts.
- The consequences of new power lines.
- The consequences of breaking the dam and pressure pipes.
4. The River Owners and Small-Scale Hydro Power Development
- Sign a contract with an external investor, and let the investor develop the power plant. In this case, the profit is shared according to the contract. The value of this option is .
- RO may finance and develop the power plant by himself/herself. The value of this option is .
- RO may sell his/her property right. The value of this option is S.
- Do nothing and wait. In this case, he/she has the possibility to choose one of the other options and choose , or S in the future. The value of this option is Z.
4.1. Signing a Contract with an Investor
4.1.1. The Probabilities
- The project has for some reason negative effects on other people’s welfare.
- The project has a negative effect on the tourist industry or other businesses.
- The project has harmful effects on the environment.
- The project affects the landscape in a negative way. This may happen when it is necessary to mount long transmission cables.
4.1.2. The River Owners Profit from a Contract with an Investor
4.1.3. About the Terms of the Contracts
- Some ROs are very risk averse. Even if the risks related to the development of SSH are small, there are risks, and some people are very risk averse.
- Some ROs cannot agree. As said before, a river has normally many owners. Sometimes, they cannot agree. Not all people trust their neighbor.
- Lack of a leader. Developing a power plant requires a leader. Sometimes, there is no leader among the ROs.
- RO is not able to finance the project. This may happen when the expected investment cost divided by the expected annual production is high. If this figure is larger than 5 NOK/kWh, it might be difficult to finance the project. However, this question has not been scientifically studied in Norway.
4.2. RO Chooses to Develop the Power Plant Himself/Herself
“Yesterday my wife walked down to the river. When she came back she was crying. I asked her what was wrong and she said: I mourn because the river will disappear and we will lose this beautiful nature. In that moment the I decided to stop the project”.
4.2.1. The Risks of Developing a Small-Scale Hydro Power Plant
- The expected annual production. The annual production depends on rainfall and the size of the catchment area. The catchment area can be calculated using a map available on NVE’s website [25]. By using the Internet application NVE-atlas and the application “Low tide”, one can estimate the rainfall field and its hydrological properties. The application “Low tide” uses meteorological data from the period 1961–1990. Based on this, it is possible to estimate the average flow of water that will flow into the planned power plant. Even if the calculated rainfall is based on a 30-year period, there are some uncertainties. According to NVE, the discrepancy between calculated expected rainfall and observed rainfall may be up to 20 percent.As an example, we will use two cases, both from Sunnfjord in Sogn og Fjordane County in Norway. The two cases are Nydal Kraft and Stølslia Kraft with an expected production of 7.3 GWh and 5.14 GWh, respectively. The Table 1 below shows the production measured in kWh and the production as a percent of expected production in the years 2011–2015:From the table, we see that the production varies from 20 percent above to 26 percent below the expected annual production.Normally, the production in the winter is very small, since most rivers are frozen. About 80 percent of the electricity from an SSH in Norway is produced in May, June and July. The production takes place in the months of snowmelt. To some extent, the production is predictable. If there is plenty of snow in the mountains, we know that the production in the spring will be large.
- The investment cost will be uncertain, but NVE has made a good tool: a very reliable publication can be downloaded free of charge from the internet [26]. As stated in this publication, the large part of the costs associated with the construction of small power plants is based on standard solutions. In Norway, there are also competent independent consultants that calculate the investment cost. In practice, this means that development costs are largely predictable.When the expected annual production and investment costs are calculated, one can find the key figure investment cost divided by the expected annual production. This ratio is widely used in the power industry as an indicator of the power plant’s profitability. The ratio is also used in determining the contract terms for landowners who enters into an agreement with an external investor.
- The future price of electricity: This, in turn, depends on factors that affect supply and demand such as:
- (a)
- The electricity grid in Norway: In Norway, there are five price areas for electricity. This is due to limited transmission capacity between areas.
- (b)
- Electricity cables to other countries: The transmission capacity between Norway and some other countries will be significantly improved when the planned cables to England and Germany are completed. The Norwegian Government has granted Statnett a license to build two new interconnections for power, one to Germany and one to the United Kingdom. Altogether, this will increase Norway’s capacity for power exchange with foreign countries by almost 50 percent. Statnett plans that cable to Germany to be commissioned in 2018, while the cable to the U.K. is scheduled to be completed in 2020 [27].
- (c)
- The demographic trend in both Norway and Norway’s electricity trading partners will affect supply and demand and, hence, the price of electricity in Norway.
- (d)
- Changes in the industrial structure in Norway that will affect the demand of electricity.
- (e)
- The growth in energy production in Norway and its electricity trading partners.
- (f)
- For an SSH, the amount of snow in the mountains in the winter greatly determines the annual production.
- Natural risks such as avalanches and prolonged drought.
- Technical risks such as technical failures or sand in the turbine.
- Financial risk: Most small power plants are initially more than 90 percent debt-financed and are vulnerable to interest rate increases [17].
4.3. RO Chooses to Defer the Development the Power Plant or Sells His/Her Rights
5. Two Cases
6. Case 1: RO Signed a Contract
The Profit Sharing
- Average annual income from sale: one million NOK.
- Grid costs per year: 30,000 NOK.
- Running costs per year: 40,000 NOK.
- Property tax per year: 0.5 percent of book value.
- Tax rate: 28 percent.
- Banks borrowing rate: five percent.
- Total investment: six million NOK where 600,000 is equity and the rest is loan.
- Linear annual depreciation of 2.5 percent over 40 years.
- Real (inflation adjusted) cost of capital after tax is three percent.
7. Case 2: The RO Builds the Power Plant Himself/Herself
8. Contract or Not a Contract
9. Conclusions
- Before any practical and often costly decisions are made, RO must evaluate his/her utility of seeing the river flow as it has always done. Development of a power plant may also destroy fishery resources and have some external effects that reduce other people’s welfare. Such effects must also be considered. If he/she comes to the conclusion that the utility of an unchanged situation is greater than anything else, he/she should not do anything with the river.
- If RO believes that his/her utility will increase if a cash flow-generating power plant is built, he/she must take the next step: to get information about the building costs of the power station and the size of normal production. Here are two possibilities:
- (a)
- Tell an investor he/she might be interested in signing a contract and ask him/her to calculate the expected investment cost and the expected annual production. This costs nothing for RO.
- (b)
- Ask an independent consultant to calculate the expected investment cost and the expected annual production. RO has to pay for the consultant.
One would think that either one chooses a or b; the answer would be about the same. However, this does not always occur this way. An example from Balestrand municipality in 2016 is as follows: The questions above were given both to an independent consultant and to an investor that wanted to sign a contract with RO. Both agreed that the expected annual production of the planned power plant was 4.5 GWh, but while the independent consultant calculated the investment cost to be 12.7 million NOK, the investor calculated it to be 22.9 million NOK.One possible reason for this difference is that IN wants a contract, and the probability that the RO will sign a contract is larger when the investment cost and then the risk of the project are high. In order to signal high risk, IN chooses expensive solutions when calculating investment costs. This is a hypothesis that one could investigate further. - Once RO has received information about the size of the investment and the expected annual production, he/she may, based on the expected electricity prices, calculate the profitability of the project. If the expected net present value of the project is positive, he/she has two choices:
- (a)
- Sign a contract with an investor.
- (b)
- Finance and build the power plant himself/herself.
All available choices will involve risk. In order for him/her to make the best choice, he/she must find the certainty equivalent to each of the two choices above and choose the one with the highest certainty equivalent. - When the RO has found the alternative with the highest certainty equivalent, he/she has to evaluate his/her utility of this alternative together with all non-economic effects.
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
SSH | Small-scale hydroelectric power plant |
RO | The owner/owners of the river |
NVE | The Norwegian Water Resources and Energy Directorate |
IN | Investor who specializes in building and operating small hydro electric power plants |
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Name | 2015 | 2014 | 2013 | 2012 | 2011 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Nydal (expected 7,300,000 kWh) | 8,665,758 | 6,354,643 | 5,974,126 | 7,402,959 | 7,776,902 |
Nydal percent of expected | 119 | 87 | 82 | 101 | 107 |
Stølslia (expected 5,140,000 kWh) | 6,193,010 | 4,074,295 | 3,792,117 | 5,184,148 | 5,628,571 |
Stølslia percent of expected | 120 | 79 | 74 | 101 | 110 |
Year → | 2006 | 2007 | 2008 | 2009 | 2010 | 2011 | 2012 | 2013 | 2014 | 2015 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Number of plants | 97 | 100 | 119 | 141 | 148 | 191 | 113 | 178 | 138 | 162 |
Profit on equity (%) | 39 | 24 | 33 | 30 | 26 | 37 | 16 | 11 | 10 | 10 |
Equity ratio (%) | 15 | 16 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 13 | 19 | 27 | 23 | 30 |
Profit (millNOK) | 55 | 38 | 52 | 64 | 72 | 107 | 42 | 75 | 42 | 66 |
Year | 2015 | 2014 | 2013 | 2012 | 2011 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Income (1000 NOK) | 9796 | 7059 | 7583 | 5951 | 5267 |
Return on total capital (percent) | 12.7 | 9.4 | 10.4 | 6.7 | 7.0 |
Return on equity (percent) | 41.5 | 31.4 | 44.8 | 30.4 | 65.7 |
Annual result after tax (1000 NOK) | 2746 | 1667 | 1750 | 799 | 1104 |
Debt (1000 NOK) | 37,571 | 38,376 | 40,565 | 40,886 | 46,779 |
Equity (1000 NOK) | 7395 | 5850 | 4783 | 3032 | 2233 |
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Idsø, J. Small Scale Hydroelectric Power Plants in Norway. Some Microeconomic and Environmental Considerations. Sustainability 2017, 9, 1117. https://doi.org/10.3390/su9071117
Idsø J. Small Scale Hydroelectric Power Plants in Norway. Some Microeconomic and Environmental Considerations. Sustainability. 2017; 9(7):1117. https://doi.org/10.3390/su9071117
Chicago/Turabian StyleIdsø, Johannes. 2017. "Small Scale Hydroelectric Power Plants in Norway. Some Microeconomic and Environmental Considerations" Sustainability 9, no. 7: 1117. https://doi.org/10.3390/su9071117
APA StyleIdsø, J. (2017). Small Scale Hydroelectric Power Plants in Norway. Some Microeconomic and Environmental Considerations. Sustainability, 9(7), 1117. https://doi.org/10.3390/su9071117