King Country Energy Won't Proceed With Proposed Mokau Scheme
King Country Energy Will Not Proceed With Proposed Mokau Hydro Scheme
King Country Energy announced today it will no longer pursue the resource consents required for the proposed 9.6MW hydro-generation scheme along the Mokau River, 4.3 kilometres downstream from its existing Wairere Falls dam.
The company began the resource consent process on the project in 2004. Chairman, Brian Gurney, cited consenting delays, mounting costs and significant increases in the expected capital cost as the primary reasons for shelving the development.
“In January, Waikato Regional Council granted us the supplementary consents required to construct a roller compacted concrete dam on the Mokau River. Up to that point, King Country Energy had spent around $2.5 million on the consenting process. However, we have a long way to go until consents may be granted and estimate we would need to invest a further $0.5 million to complete the process.
“The economics of developing the Mokau hydro scheme are very challenging. Even if we gained resource consent, we would be unable to justify building the plant for many years, unless there is a significant increase in the forecast wholesale electricity price path. Therefore, at this point, the Mokau project is economically infeasible,” explained Mr Gurney.
King Country Energy CEO, Rob Foster, said resource consenting processes and the high costs of securing consents disadvantage smaller electricity generation developers.
“Unfortunately, high consenting costs on smaller developments are a significant hurdle, therefore small operators like King Country Energy can only pursue lower-risk developments that provide an appropriate rate of return. That means it can take smaller generators a lot longer to find the right project and get it online.
“However, King Country Energy is determined consenting costs won’t become a barrier to adding to our generation portfolio. We are continuing to actively pursue other generation options because our aim, in the medium-term, is to increase our generation capacity and minimise our reliance on the electricity hedge market,” said Mr Foster.
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