It’s great being
proven right. I’ve long argued that who
owns the companies that make up the energy or indeed any other sector is
important because if you don’t own it then you simply don’t control it. The free market ideologues argue that it
doesn’t matter who owns what provided the jobs are anchored here and it’s that
attitude which has prevailed in the UK for the last forty years or so.
So far merger and
acquisition activity in the energy sector has tended to support the free market
view but that all changed recently with the announcement that the wave energy
company Wavegen based in Inverness was being shut down, its eighteen employees
were being made redundant and – importantly – all its activities were being
moved to its parent company in Germany.
The parent company
– Voith Hydro of Heidenheim in Germany say it’s their intention to “pool the Know-How” at the company’s
engineering centre which essentially means Wavegen is being intellectually
asset stripped.
Of course it’s not
as if Wavegen was a failure. In fact it
designed and built Limpet which uses Wavegen’s OWC (oscillating water column)
technology. Limpet is the world's first
commercial scale grid connected wave energy plant. It has an installed capacity
of 500kW, was commissioned in November 2000 on the isle of Islay and has been
supplying electricity to the grid ever since.
Wavegen also
supplied the technology Spanish utility Ente Vasco de la EnergĂa (EVE) use for their wave power
project at Mutriku on the Bay of Biscay. The plant was commissioned in July
2011 and will generate an output of 300kW to power 250 households locally.
This then all
sounds like good news. Here is a small
high tech company doing some extremely smart stuff in the marine energy sector
and even exporting its technology. Just
what we’d all hoped from the renewable sector although of course it took the
support of German funding to get it moving along properly after Voith bought
the company in 2005. Despite its
potential Wavegen along with countless other companies found the raising
funding in the UK to be a major obstacle. This is sadly not an unusual situation.
So what triggered
Voith’s decision to kill of Wavegen and retreat to Germany? Voith claim the
decision was part of their plans for “re-organisation”.
However, the
company was developing the Siadar Wave Energy Project on the Isle of Lewis in
the Outer Hebrides which used an “active breakwater” designed to harness power
from the Atlantic waves in Siadar Bay. The project was for 4MW with a second
phase that would expand the output to 30MW.
The objective was to export most of that energy to the mainland in this
case via an HVDC (high voltage direct current) cable.
But in 2011 one of
the project’s main investors – the German company RWE – pulled out and one of
their spokesman said “Tidal seems simpler to develop and it's going to be
easier and quicker to develop than the Siadar (wave) technology”.
Given the
technology has already been proven this appears to be a quite bizarre excuse
and frankly, I have real difficulty in believing it.
Then in late 2012
it was announced that the cost of that HDVC cable had risen by a mighty 75% to
at least £700m! Needless to say this
effectively signed the project’s death sentence and along with it the loss of
over £5m of public sector investment.
Highlands and
Islands Council have quite rightly said that questions do need to be asked
about the costs and the time scales involved in laying the HVDC because it
would have allowed other renewable sources such as wind to transmit power to
the mainland.
I also think the
Scottish Government should take a look at this project. Whilst £5m or so worth of grants won’t break
the public sector bank and I believe in the public sector supporting projects
like this I can’t help but feel that we need to better understand what went
wrong.
Of course you can’t
prevent private sector companies pulling out of a project if they’re not happy
with it but I would really like to know why RWE entered into the deal in the
first place if they were so unsure of the technology. Seems to me they had plenty of opportunity
to make that assessment before signing on the dotted line.
I’d also like to
know why this project was aimed mainly at exporting electricity to the
mainland. Why not go for the local market
and aim to achieve energy autonomy for the Western Isles. Perhaps they might even have looked at using
the Western Isles for trialling a range of new technologies including using
some of the energy produced by the Siadar project to run electrolysers
producing hydrogen for use as a transport fuel or as a means of storing energy
by converting the hydrogen into ammonia making it easier to contain safely.
Perhaps a little
more imagination and forward thinking might have made this a more affordable
and beneficial project both in terms of what it would bring to the peoples of
the Western Isles, the renewables industry in general and of course, Scotland’s
industrial scene.
I say “perhaps”
because of course nobody can tell whether the outcome would have been different
or whether Voith Hydro – Wavegen’s owners – ever had any intention of doing
anything but absorb the Wavegen “knowhow” into its German based headquarters
and shutting the Inverness base down.
Regardless, it
should teach us a lesson. Scotland has
now lost the economic potential that Wavegen represented as well as the jobs of
some talented people.
This was a small
company but a very smart one with a clever set of proven technologies. That we allowed Voith to buy it in the first
place was extremely careless but of course given the attitude of our glorious
financial sector towards funding companies like this it wasn’t surprising.
It would be nice to
say this is unlikely to happen again but a number of ostensibly “British”
renewable technology companies are now already foreign owned or have majority
overseas shareholders. So we need to be
alert to the possibility of more losses of this nature although of course we
won’t stop this until such time as the bankers et al adopt a different
culture. Yes I know - pigs might fly!
(first published in the Press & Journal "Energy" supplement April 2013)
(first published in the Press & Journal "Energy" supplement April 2013)