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Vestas.com Wind Energy in Poland – Potential, Prospects and Pitfalls A presentation for the joint seminar by demosEuropa and the Danish Embassy in Warsaw.

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Presentation on theme: "Vestas.com Wind Energy in Poland – Potential, Prospects and Pitfalls A presentation for the joint seminar by demosEuropa and the Danish Embassy in Warsaw."— Presentation transcript:

1 vestas.com Wind Energy in Poland – Potential, Prospects and Pitfalls A presentation for the joint seminar by demosEuropa and the Danish Embassy in Warsaw by Kenneth Kolvits, Head of Vestas Poland 19 November 2008

2 2 | Presentation title, September 9, 2015September 9, 2015 Agenda 1.Wind Potential in Poland 2. Installations, Share of Wind in Electricity Mix and Comparisons 3.What Hampers Poland in Exploiting its Potential?

3 3 | Presentation title, September 9, 2015September 9, 2015 Wind Atlas Poland Source: GreenMax, 2008

4 4 | Presentation title, September 9, 2015September 9, 2015 Wind Potential/Prospects in Poland EER: 5-6 GW by 2020 (EER Country Analysis) PWEA: 13,5 GW by 2020 (PWEA Assessment of Wind Energy Development Opportunities) BTM: 3,4 GW by 2012 (World Market Update 2007) ”Due to excellent wind conditions (…), Poland is one of the most promising wind energy markets in Europe. The country possesses plenty of potentially profitable locations and great development possibilities” (European Bank for Reconstruction and Development in 2004)

5 5 | Presentation title, September 9, 2015September 9, 2015 Installed Wind Power Capacity in the EU (total end 2007 in MW) Germany22,247 MW Spain15,145 MW Denmark3,125 MW Italy2,726 MW France2,454 MW UK2,389 MW Portugal2,150 MW Netherlands1,746 MW Austria982 MW Greece871 MW Ireland805 MW Sweden788 MW Norway333 MW Belgium287 MW Poland276 MW Source: GWEC, 2008

6 6 | Presentation title, September 9, 2015September 9, 2015 Wind penetration per capita in 2007: Poland one of the lowest figures in the EU

7 7 | Presentation title, September 9, 2015September 9, 2015 Share of Wind in Electricity Generation

8 8 | Presentation title, September 9, 2015September 9, 2015 Despite Great Resources and International Requirements, Poland is Lagging Behind Indicative RES-E target: 7,5 % of electricity shall be met by renewable energy sources by 2010 (Directive 2001/77EC) Proposed mandatory RES-target of Draft European Directive of January 2008: 15 % of gross final energy consumption shall come from renewable energy ”Progress towards the RES-E target in Poland is low.” (European Commission, DG Energy and Transport 2008)

9 9 | Presentation title, September 9, 2015September 9, 2015 What Hampers Poland? 2 Main Barriers for Polish Wind Energy Development 1. Grid Infrastructure and Connection A)Insufficient grid infrastructure in Northern Poland, where best resource is According to PSE: 1,120 km of new HV lines and 5 new substations needed by 2020 B) Obtaining grid connection - SOs have 3- to 5-year infrastructure development plans, but investment priorities often change (i.e. Need to repair existing line before building new one) - Lack of coordination between different DSOs and TSO - Connection conditions (CCs) are sometimes hard to meet, i.e. very high transmission fees - In theory, CCs lapse after 2 years; in practice, not the case → capacity reserved on grid for projects that might not get built (many not viable projects hold CCs) blocking other projects: Thus, new projects stuck in connection queue Source: EER, 2008; Green Max, 2008 and PSE, 2008

10 10 | Presentation title, September 9, 2015September 9, 2015 What Hampers Poland? 2 Main Barriers for the Wind Energy Development 2. Complex process of development procedures Time consuming and relative complex set of procedures for the projects to obtain zoning plan Time consuming and complex procedure for environmental analysis in order to obtain the approval for wind energy Few and/or insufficient resources and knowledge to ease the process

11 11 | Presentation title, September 9, 2015September 9, 2015 To sum up: Poland has a huge resource and its overall regulatory framework makes it an attractive market However, barriers hamper wind energy development in Poland and should be removed as soon as possible When barriers removed, Poland expected to be able to exploit full potential and comply with international obligations Vestas believes in the Polish market and remains strongly committed

12 vestas.com Thank you for your attention Kenneth F. Kolvits, Head of Vestas Poland Copyright Notice The documents are created by Vestas Wind Systems A/S and contain copyrighted material, trademarks, and other proprietary information. All rights reserved. No part of the documents may be reproduced or copied in any form or by any means—such as graphic, electronic, or mechanical, including photocopying, taping, or information storage and retrieval systems without the prior written permission of Vestas Wind Systems A/S. The use of these documents by you, or anyone else authorized by you, is prohibited unless specifically permitted by Vestas Wind Systems A/S. You may not alter or remove any trademark, copyright or other notice from the documents. The documents are provided “as is” and Vestas Wind Systems A/S shall not have any responsibility or liability whatsoever for the results of use of the documents by you.


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