Spanish developers are building over the border to avoid
taxes and red tape.
Continuing regulatory issues in Spain mean solar development
is getting pushed across the border.
This month, for example, the Irish developer WElink Energy,
which has offices in Madrid and Barcelona, inaugurated Europe’s largest
subsidy-free solar plant on the back of a power-purchase agreement with Holaluz,
a Spanish energy retailer. But the plant is in Portugal.
WElink opted to build the 46-megawatt project in Ourique, 50
miles from the Spanish border, to avoid red tape and a 7 percent tax on
electrical power production, said Holaluz’s Chief Legal Officer Daniel Pérez
Rodríguez.
“Next year they are planning on installing 200 megawatts in
the south of Portugal,” said Pérez Rodríguez., a current director of the
Spanish PV Union and former defense lawyer for the solar industry.
Long-term, he said, WElink hopes to build a gigawatt of
capacity on the Iberian Peninsula. Three-quarters of that is earmarked for
Spain, but WElink is holding off its Spanish market development plans until
there is a change in the regulatory environment.
At the moment, the fact that Spain applies a 7 percent tax
to renewable energy production means Portuguese plants have an immediate
financial advantage over their Spanish counterparts.
The tax is a hangover from when Spain racked up a huge
imbalance between electricity system income and renewable energy subsidies,
known as the tariff deficit.
Spain’s last government introduced the tax on the value of
electrical energy production in 2012, as one of its first moves to cope with
the deficit. It later axed subsidies altogether, returning the electricity
system to a surplus in 2014, but the tax has remained.
What’s more, the tax gets applied even to new plants that
had nothing to do with the tariff deficit, said Pérez Rodríguez. In Spain
today, “plants don’t get a subsidy, but they all get taxed,” he said.
Taxation is only part of the problem for Spanish solar
developers. They also have to overcome a barrage of national, regional and
local regulation obstacles. The red tape is frustrating for clean-energy
retailers such as Holaluz.
The Barcelona-based company is trying to help Spanish
customers join the energy transition by offering residential solar kits and
Tesla Powerwall batteries, but it has to pay for an entire legal team just to
sort out the paperwork.
Some of the regulatory hoops border the ridiculous, said
Pérez Rodríguez. In one case, a customer’s local council requested a written
waste disposal plan for the boxes that came with a 2-kilowatt residential solar
kit.
Not all local authorities go to such extremes, said Pérez
Rodríguez. But the administrative hurdles posed by national regulation are bad
enough. If they were streamlined or eliminated, he said, solar installation
times could be cut from three months to one, and the cost could be halved.
The contrast with neighboring Portugal is evident even in
the grid connection process. If two or more developers are vying for the same
grid connection in Portugal, the authorities put it to a draw. In Spain, it’s
usually down to who has the best contacts, deepest pockets, or both.
All this hasn’t stopped Spanish developers from applying for
grid connection permits. In fact, on paper, Spain is experiencing a solar boom,
with around 20 gigawatts of production looking for permission to join the grid.
However, the costly market setup, combined with
regulatory barriers
to self-consumption that can add up to five years to the break-even point
for solar, means little is happening on the ground.
Pérez Rodríguez said only around 1,200 plants were listed on
the government’s solar self-consumption registry, although more may have been
built with no regard for the regulatory requirement to register the systems.
The situation could change soon, though.
A surprise change
in administration in June has raised hopes that the stifling red tape
brought in by Spain’s former leadership could be swept away in the near future.
The new Spanish Socialist Workers' Party (Partido Socialista
Obrero Español or PSOE) government is in a minority, with the slimmest
representation of any ruling party in the history of Spain.
But the PSOE has pledged to improve support for renewables,
and there is wide cross-party consensus that the rules governing solar need to
change.
Plus there is a window of opportunity to act now because a
review of the electricity system was underway when the PSOE came to power. The
PSOE could easily hijack the review to make it easier to build solar in Spain,
said Pérez Rodríguez.
And if not, at least the Portuguese won’t complain.
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