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| www.gtai.com The German Electricity Market - Current State and Issues Heiko Staubitz Germany Trade & Invest 15.01.2013

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Page 1: The German Electricity Market - Current State and Issues€¦ ·  · 2013-01-24The German Electricity Market - Current State and Issues ... European comparison shows that annual

| www.gtai.com

The German Electricity Market -

Current State and Issues

Heiko Staubitz

Germany Trade & Invest

15.01.2013

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Main Objectives

The Energy Concept (2010)

Energy efficiency measures

Increase in energy productiveness 2.1% p.a.

Reduction of energy consumption -50% (2050 vs. 2008)

Reduction of electricity consumption -25% (2050 vs. 2008)

Renovation rate 2% p.a.

Reduction of energy for transportation -40% (2050 vs. 2005)

Climate protection measures 2020 2050

CO2 cuts vs. 1990 -40% -80%

Renewable share of… 2020 2050

Total energy consumption 18% 60%

Electricity consumption 35% 80%

Heat generation 14% 60%

2

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Plant utilization of conventional power plants remains the highest.

Electricity Supply

Average Hours of Yearly Full Load of

German Power Plants (2010)

7.330

6.600 6.400

3.870 3.820

3.180

1.380 1.210

1.100 900

0

1.000

2.000

3.000

4.000

5.000

6.000

7.000

8.000

Year: 8,760 h

3

Source: BMU 2012, BDEW 2012

Energy Source Share in Installed

Capacity (2011)

Nuclear

Power

7%

Lignite

12%

Hard Coal

16%

Natural

Gas

15% Oil and

Others

11%

Hydro-electricity

Biomass

7%

Wind

Power

17%

Photo-

voltaic

15%

Total: 167.8 GW Annual peak load: app. 80 GW wind power: 29.06 GW PV power: 24.7 GW

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The share of renewable energy and natural gas in electricity generation

has increased substantially since 1999.

Source: BDEW 2012

Electricity Supply

Nuclear

Power

31%

Lignite

24%

Hard Coal

25%

Natural

Gas

10%

Oil,

Pumped

Storage

4%

Renewable

Energies

5%

Energy Source Share in Net Electricity

Generation (1999)

Energy Source Share in Net*

Electricity Generation (2011)

Total: 518 TWh Total: 579 TWh

4

*Reducing the gross electricity share of 614.5 TWh by the power

plants own consumption of 35,2 TWh.

Nuclear

Power

18%

Lignite

24%

Hard Coal

18%

Natural

Gas

14%

Oil and

Others

5%

Hydro-

electricity

Biomass

10%

Wind

Power

8%

Photo-

voltaic

3%

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Electricity demand

230 227 239 240 243 245 249 250 254 255 252 227 250 252

130 131 131 134 137 139 140 141 142 140 140 139

142 140

103 107 108 109 113 117 119 119 120 121 121 120

124 124 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 15 16 16 17

16 17 17

8 7 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 9 9

9 9 9

0

100

200

300

400

500

600

Industry Households Trade, Commerce & Services Transportation Agriculture

Net Electricity Consumption by Consumer Group in Germany (1998-2011,

in TWh)

5

The German industry is the main consumer of electricity.

Source: BDEW 2012 Note: * estimated ** preliminary, estimated

487.5 488.4 501.4

507.7 516.2 525

531.9 534.2 539.6 538.4 541.2 540.8

541.1

510.6

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9,15 8,51

5,46 5,62 5,99 6,17 7,02

7,65

9,26 9

10,7

8,7 8,63 8,83 8,52

0,11

0,11

0,11 0,11 0,11 0,11

0,11 0,11

0,11 0,11

0,11

0,11 0,11 0,11 0,11

0,08

0,09

0,2 0,24

0,35

0,42

0,51 0,69

0,88 1,02

1,16

1,31 2,05

3,53 3,59

0,13

0,19

0,05 0,05

0,05 0,05

0,05 0,205

0,05

0,05 0,05

0,03 0,04

0,15

0,26

0,31 0,36 1,23

1,23 1,23

1,23 1,23

1,23

1,23 1,23

1,54 1,54 0,07

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

16

1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012

Generation, Transport, Distribution  Concession levy Renewable Energy Act contribution

CHP-allocation Electricity tax §19 allocation

1. Source: IE-Leipzig 2010

2. Note: *Estimations based on BDEW

Components of the Electricity Price

6

Development and Composition of Electricity Prices for Industrial Customers in

Germany (1998-2012, in EUR ct/kWh)*

Electricity prices for the industry have been rising almost without interruption -

mainly due to taxes and duties.

Source: BDEW, VEA, 2012 * electricity consumption from 100 kW/1600H up to 4000 kW/5000h

13,87

9,34

8,86

6,16

6,47 6,86 7,98

8,92

9,73

11,53

11,56 13,25

11,4

12,07 14,04

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There are several hardship provisions available from the government to

cope with the electricity costs.

Source: BAFA 2012

Means to Reduce the Cost

Chemicals 27%

Paper

17% NE-Metals

11%

Steel &

Ferric Industry

15%

Others

30%

Hardship Provision According to EEG by

Sector (2011, % of privileged electr.)

7

EEG can be lowered depending on energy

consumption:

• 1–≤10 GWh/a: 10% of regular EEG

•10-≤100 GWh/a: 1% of regular EEG

•>100 GWh/a: 0.05 cent/kWh

Focus on energy-intensive industry

Reguirements:

Consumption of more than 1 GWh/a

Electricity cost/gross value added: 14%

Certificate for potentials to lower energy

consumption (ISO 50001)

Electricity tax for companies is lowered to 75% of

regular tarif: 1.54 ct/kWh

In addition, companies can be refunded with up to

90% of the paid electricity taxes

Requirement: Consumption of more than 48 MWh/a

Reduced Electricity Tax and Recompensation

Hardship Provision According to §§ 40 EEG

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Industrial Electricity Prices

8

European comparison shows that annual industrial electricity tariffs in

Germany are in the upper range.

Source: Eurostat 2012; Note: Prices incl. taxes, without VAT *latest data available refers to 2008

Avge. annual industrial electricity tariffs (€-

Cent/kWh, incl. taxes, without VAT, 2009)*

Electricity Prices for Industry (2011,

EUR ct/kWh, 0.5-2 GWh)

Electricity Prices for Industry (2011,

EUR ct/kWh, 20-70 GWh)

6,48

8,03

8,49

8,93

9,52

9,82

9,92

10,14

10,25

10,68

10,98

11,08

11,37

11,55

12,48

12,76

15,28

0 5 10 15 20

Bulgaria

Romania

France

Sweden

Hungary

UK

Denmark

Poland

Netherlands

Austria*

Belgium

Czech Rep.

Spain

Ireland

Germany

Slovak Rep.

Italy

5,14

6,28

7,15

7,18

7,69

7,84

7,89

8,12

8,39

8,42

8,82

8,88

8,95

10,02

10.20

10,67

12,2

0 5 10 15

Bulgaria

Romania

France

Sweden

Ireland

Netherlands

Spain

Poland

Belgium

UK

Denmark

Hungray

Austria*

Germany

Czech Rep.

Slovak Rep.

Italy

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Germany offers slightly higher electricity prices for households.

Source: Eurostat 2012; Note: Consumption: 2,500 kWh < 5,000 kWh

Electricity Prices for Private Households

9

Average annual electricity prices for private households (2011, EUR-cent/kWh, incl.

all taxes)

8,26

10,82

12,5

13,84

14,33

14,71

14,95

15,4

16,81

16,82

17,43

19,01

19,47

19,86

20,13

20,92

21,33

21,36

25,28

29,08

0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35

Bulgaria

Romania

Greece

France

UK

Poland

Czech Rep.

Finland

Hungary

Slovak Rep.

Netherlands

Ireland

Spain

Austria

Italy

Sweden

Norway

Belgium

Germany

Denmark

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Electricity Supply

10

The German electricity grid is one of the most secure in Europe.

Source: Umweltbundesamt 2011, Bundeskartellamt, 2011 *including electricity from renewable energies

Power Plants with more than

100 MW Capacity (2011)

Nuclear Power

Hard Coal

Lignite

Natural Gas

Heating Oil

Smeltery Gas

Refinery Gas

Furnace Gas

Oil Residues

Wind Power

Hydroelectricity

Biomass 276,04

133,86

95,1

91,9

88,84

81,42

33,7

31,77

19,27

0 100 200 300

Portugal

Spain*

France

Sweden

Italy

UK

Netherlands

Austria

Germany

Minutes lost per Customer

(2010)**

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Power balance 2012

New power structure in 2022 will lead to bottle necks in Germany

Offshore- Wind parks

The Smart Grid Market Overview

Power balance 2022

Source: Netzentwicklungsplan 2012

11

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More than 1.000 market participants are active in the fully liberalized

German electricity market.

Source: www.enet.eu; BMWi 2011

Smart Grid

• Four interconnected companies operate

transmission grids (and grids in the

lower voltage level)

• High voltage (up to 220 kV): 77.000 km,

4% underground cables

• extra high voltage (380 kV): 35.000 km,

4% underground cables

• Total: 1,000 market participants: Mainly

municipal utilities (Stadtwerke)

• App. 100 small private companies

• 150 new market participants

• Low voltage (up to 230 or 400 V):

1.123.000 km, 80% underground cables

• Medium voltage (up to 60 kV): 479.000

km, 64% underground cables

Transmission Grid

869 Operators of Distribution Grids

German Transmission Grid

(2012)

German Distribution Grid

(2010)

12

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Network Expansion

Expansion requirements for the transmission and distribution grid

Grid expansion of 3,800km (2100km DC, 1700 AC) is required by 2020.

Baseline scenario with overhead lines requires:

20 bn. €

The connection of the offshore-grid is estimated to

10-12 bn. €

Transmission grid

By 2030, the expansion of the distribution grid requires investments of

€ 25 bn

Distribution grid

13

Sources: VKU, 2012; Netzentwicklungsplan 2012

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State of the art 2040

PV - Own consumption 0.4% of the overall generated PV power is used for own consumption

2025: 20% of PV generated power for own consumption (35% in 2040).

Control reserve Required control reserve of ~14-17 GW

In 2025 the demand for control reserve increases by 50% to 2010 and by 70% in 2040.

Surplus energy Storage demand for a surplus of 150 GWh (2010)

Storage necessity 2025-2030: 3.5-8 TWh 2040-2050: 40 TWh

Potential for Energy Storage in Germany

Sources: DB Research 2012, BCG 2011, DENA Netzstudie II 2011, BAFA, Bundesnetzagentur, BMU Leitstudie 2011

14

Expected: Investment of € 25 - 30 billion in storage capacity until 2030

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The Principle of „Own-Consumption“

Wattage

Time of day

0h 3h 6h 9h 12h 15h 18h 21h 24h

Feed-in tariff: 12.00 to 19.50 €ct/kWh1

Energy from grid: Costs ~25 €ct/kWh2

Major income through cost savings on electricity from the grid, Feed-in tariff only for surplus electricity:

PV Energy

Energy Demand

„Own-Consumption“ of PV Energy

(saves ~25 €ct./kWh²)

Notes: 1) Depending on size /type of system; Min. to max . tariff in 2012 of new EEG 2012 2) Depending on electricity retail price of respective utility company.

15.01.2013 | www.gtai.com 15

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The German PV Market reached „Grid-Parity“ in 2011

* Model calculation for rooftop systems >30 kWp, <100 kWp; based on 802 kWh/kWp (Frankfurt), 100% financing, 6% interest rate, 20 year term, 2% p.a. O&M costs

Sources: Feed-in Tariffs: BMU 2012, pending final approval; System Prices: BSW 2012; System Price Forecast: EPIA 2011; Model Calculation: Deutsche Bank 2010; Electricity Prices 2007-2011: Eurostat 2012 [Private households with annual consumption >2500 kWh, <5000 kWh]; Electricity Price Forecast 2011-2015: Prognos 2012 [Price Forecast 2016: 28,20 €ct./kWh]

“… PV can develop within a few years from the most expensive to one of the cheapest types of power generation from renewables.” (BMU 2011)

New EEG 2012

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Control reserve

17

Easy market entry for smaller players in the field of control reserve

Primary control reserve (PCR)

Secondary control reserve (SCR)

Tertiary control reserve (TCR)

Time for activation 30 s 5 min 15 min

Availability Up to 15 min 15 min to 1hr Minimum of 15 min

required min. bids by regulator

1 MW 5 MW 5 MW (10 MW**)

Tendering period weekly daily

Focus on new technologies

Flexible/controllable plants, battery storage systems, renewable energy systems at direct marketing

Today for energy storage and control reserve only hydro pump and gas power

Plants attending at the Balancing Energy Market in Germany.

Legislative framework has been changed to open the market for innovative storage

technologies.

IRR is depending on the technology used and on the control reserve segment

targeted

** As transition bid amount before definitive reduction to 5 MW

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Surplus energy

18

Source: Gerhardt IWES 2011, ZSW 2011

Surplus starts at 40-50% fluctuating renewable share

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-90

-80

-70

-60

-50

-40

-30

-20

-10

0

-45

-40

-35

-30

-25

-20

-15

-10

-5

0

2020 2030 2040 2050

Po

wer in

GW

---

En

erg

y i

n T

Wh

Hours

Days

Weeks

Months

Years

hours2

days2

weeks2

month2

years2

Balancing...

Renew. Share: 43% 68% 88%

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guaranteed feed-in tariff

electricity price

marketpremium

managementpremium

1) Feed-in tariff(EEG 2012 remuneration)

2) Direct marketing scheme

Elements of available remuneration schemes

Market PremiumDifference between electricity price and feed-in tariff (EEG 2012 remuneration). If a supplier sells its electricity at a price higher than the average price, it can make an additional profit.

Electricity PriceFor calculation, reference value is used - based on the average monthly electricity price reached at the electricity market (EEX).

Management Premium

To cover the cost of participating in trading and deviations from

forecasting. Paid as a lump sum:

Year 2012: 1.20 €ct/kWh | Year 2013: 0,65 €ct/kWh

Year 2014: 0.45 €ct/kWh | From 2015: 0.30 €ct/kWh

A higher premium is paid if plants are equipped with remote control technique.Additional profits are possible through exact feed-in calculation and management.

Operators of renewable energy facilities have two options for remuneration:

1) Feed-in tariff remuneration or 2) Direct sale under the direct marketing scheme

To improve market and system integration, incentives for direct selling

of power from renewable energy have been established.

Source: Renewable Energies Sources Act (EEG) 2012; Managementprämienverordnung MaPrV 29.08.2012

The Optional Market Premium

19

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Conclusion

20

1. Pressure on the grid is increasing as many additional GWs of PV and wind will

come on-line.

2. Short term: rising interest for “developing markets” like balancing energy,

direct marketing of renewable and self-consumption

3. Long term: rising interest for seasonal storage from surplus energy

4. Different players like energy traders, utilities, system integrators, project

developers are looking for “new solution” to participate in “developing

markets” and export markets.

5. Further development will depend

largely on changes in the legislation,

progress in the grid extension

and new business models

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Mumbai Office Tokyo Office

Berlin - Headquarters

Mr. Tobias Homann Senior Manager Photovoltaics T. +49 30 200 099-391 [email protected]

Mr. Thomas Grigoleit Director Renewable Energies & Resources T. +49 30 200 099-224 [email protected]

Mr. Tobias Rothacher Senior Manager Photovoltaics and Bioenergy T. +49 30 200 099-225 [email protected]

Contact Data – GTAI Investment Consulting

Mr. Markus Hempel China Representative Beijing, China T. +86 10 6539 6725 F. +86 10 6590 6167 [email protected]

North America

Europe

Asia-Pacific

© 2013 Germany Trade & Invest All information provided by Germany Trade & Invest has been put together with the utmost care. However, we assume no liability for the accuracy of the information provided.

Mr. Iwami Asakawa Japan Representative Tokyo, Japan T. +81 3 5275 2072 F. +81 3 5275 2012 [email protected]

Mr. Claus Habermeier Director New York, USA T: +1 212 584 9715 F: +1 212 262 6449 [email protected]

Ms. Angelika Geiger Director San Francisco, USA T: +1 415 248 1246 F: +1 415 627 9169 [email protected]

Ms. Flérida Regueira Cortizo Senior Manager Environmental Technologies T. +49 30 200 099-230 [email protected]

Ms. Asha-Maria Sharma India Representative Mumbai, India T. +91 22 66 65 21 80 [email protected]

New York Office San Francisco Office

Beijing Office

Renewable Energy and Resources Division:

Mr. Heiko Staubitz Senior Manager Energy Storage / Smart Grid T. +49 30 200 099-226 [email protected]

Mr. Jonas Rabe Manager Wind T. +49 30 200 099-228 [email protected]

Ms. Esther Frey Manager Wind T. +49 30 200 099-253 [email protected]

Ms. Anne Bräutigam Manager Wind T. +49 30 200 099-228 [email protected]