By Paul Homewood
https://www.emrdeliverybody.com/cm/home.aspx
The government has recently announced the results of the latest Capacity Market Auction, for 2021/22.
It makes dismal reading for anyone hoping to see some new capacity coming on stream any time soon.
Once again, the bulk of the auction has been taken up by existing capacity. New build generation is only 767 MW, and this all appears to be small gas engine stuff.
There is no new CCGT. Indeed there has been none at all for any of the four auctions now completed. The only “new” plant has been Carrington, which was already under construction before the CM auction process began.
The Committee on Climate Change, in their Fifth Carbon Budget, recognised that 39 GW of existing capacity would be gone by 2030, a mixture of coal, gas and nuclear. This generation gap would need to be filled.
Given the lead times involved, we are now leaving it perilously late to get new capacity in place by the mid 2020s, when all coal plants are due to have closed.
There is a sub story to the existing generation business.
As Timera Energy relate, a large chunk of coal capacity has also exited:

https://www.timera-energy.com/blog/
This is likely to mean that much of this coal, and indeed gas, capacity will shut sooner rather later, as they rely on capacity market payments to justify standing around idle for most of the year.
Timera have this analysis:
There have been genuine reductions in the costs of flexible capacity over the last 12 months. These have been supported by falling costs of capital as investors target UK power infrastructure. But capacity cost reductions had little to do with an auction clearing price of 8.40 £/kW.
The auction result was instead driven by lower than expected exit price levels for older coal & CCGT plants. These are hard to reconcile with the gap between current unit margins and fixed costs. But low bids suggest an unwillingness from owners to close older plants, whether for ‘strategic’ or other reasons.
A range of analysis has been published on why the T-4 auction cleared at 8 £/kW. In today’s article we focus instead on implications of the auction result. We consider what it means for evolution of the capacity mix, market pricing dynamics and asset investment.
Capacity mix changes
Successful and unsuccessful capacity in the auction are summarised in Chart 1.
Chart 1: New and exited capacity from 2021-22 T-4 auction
Source: Timera Energy, National Grid
What’s in?
2.2GW of interconnector capacity was successful across three projects, Eleclink (UK-FR), NEMO (UK-BE) and IFA2 (UK-FR). 0.8GW of new generation capacity was dominated by distribution connected gas engines. 1.2GW of new DSR was also strongly influenced by engines and batteries behind the meter.
What’s out?
8.5GW older existing thermal capacity exited the auction. 7.7GW of coal units, 0.7GW of older CCGTs and 0.1GW of coal plant GTs and engines.
These exits will have some important near term implications for coal plant closures:
- Eggborough (1.8GW) has announced closure this year after exiting the T-1 auction
- Fiddlers Ferry (1.7GW) and Cottam (1.8GW) will likely close after the 2018-19 capacity year given these plants have no capacity support beyond.
- Aberthaw (1.5GW) will likely close after 2020-21 given no agreement beyond.
- West Burton (1.8GW) has no capacity agreement in 2019-20 but does have one in 2020-21. This plant is likely to remain open until early next decade hunting T-1 support, but in doing so may supress T-1 prices.
Beyond 2021-22 the UK coal fleet is likely to be reduced to the IED compliant Drax coal units (1.2GW) and Ratcliffe (1.8GW). Based on current market conditions the UK may well achieve its targeted closure of all coal stations prior to 2025, on an economic basis alone.
Market pricing impact
The capacity mix changes from this year’s auction set up a major shift in the UK supply stack:
- Removal of large grid connected coal assets from the middle of the stack
- Replacement of this capacity with:
- high variable cost engines/DSR (at the far right of stack)
- interconnectors whose pricing/volume depends on conditions in foreign markets
The replacement of mid-merit with peaking plants, accelerates a trend established in the previous three auctions. While it fulfils the government’s goals in a capacity accounting sense, it will have some important implications for wholesale market pricing dynamics.
Changing stack shape is set to support super peak prices. The removal of coal units means prices will more often need to rise to bring on gas engines during periods of high net system demand. This is likely to increase the peak/offpeak price ratio as well as supporting spot price volatility.
The competitive position of new interconnectors in the supply stack depends on price levels in foreign markets. Under normal market conditions, the interconnectors will tend to import cheaper power from the Continent. But Winter 2016/17 has shown that flows can dry up or reverse during periods of UK system stress, if these coincide with stress in Continental power markets (e.g. FR, NL, BE).
Asset investment implications
Investors are keenly aware of a key policy question arising from the auction result. Are the regulatory authorities and National Grid (as TSO) comfortable with the type of capacity being delivered by the market?
If the answer to that question is no, then watch out for potential policy changes that (i) support new CCGTs and/or (ii) reduce the competitiveness of engines/DSR. For example:
- A rule change to limit cashout price chasing would present a major challenge to gas engines
- Toughening of DSR performance standards would erode competitiveness of behind the meter flex.
Four capacity auctions have now passed and a large new CCGT project is yet to succeed. However behind the scenes new CCGT costs continue to fall, due to a combination of rising efficiency, falling turbine costs and reductions in cost of capital. Despite this it will be difficult to build new CCGTs with capacity prices below 20 £/kW. This means new CCGT projects remain queued to cap any capacity price rises above 25 £/kW.
More efficient and flexible existing CCGTs are set to benefit in the wholesale market from the supply stack transition. The increasing influence of higher variable cost peaker/DSR capacity supports CCGT margin rents. But an 8 £/kW capacity price is a tough price to absorb for these benefits.
A single digit clearing price has caught owners of existing CCGTs by surprise. It brings brings future bidding strategy & closure decisions sharply into focus for older, less efficient and less flexible CCGTs.
These older CCGTs have fixed costs of 20-25 £/kW. On a risk adjusted margin basis it makes no sense to stay open with single digit capacity prices. The dynamics around exiting CCGTs should provide significant price support around 15-20 £/kW in the next few auctions.
https://www.timera-energy.com/implications-of-uk-capacity-auction-results/
In short, this over reliance on small scale peakers and interconnectors will exacerbate peak pricing in periods of high demand, ultimately leading to higher prices for consumers.
via NOT A LOT OF PEOPLE KNOW THAT
March 4, 2018 at 08:15AM
