Update on Developments in Russia’s Renewable Energy Sector (Part II)
To view Part I of “Update on Developments in Russia’s Renewable Energy Sector,” please click here.
Investment in Renewable Energy
After the 2008 announcements and proposals calling for increased investment in production of solar products in Russia (see earlier ClimateIntel postings), some steps were taken by the government and by industry. For example, Nano Solar Technology (NST), created in June 2009, undertook a solar module project in the Republic of Chuvashia. This 49/51 joint venture is owned respectively by Russian state corporation Rusnano and the Renova Group of Companies. Oerlikon Solar has been chosen to provide a 120 MW end-to-end line for the production of thin film modules. The equipment is scheduled to be delivered to a new production facility located on the territory of the chemical plant “Khimprom” (city of Novocheboksarsk) in 2010, with production scheduled to start in 2011. This project will significantly increase the production capacity of the Russian PV market. Ryazan Metal Ceramics Instrumentation Plant in Ryazan Oblast is already using a 12 MW module manufacturing line supplied by Spire Corporation. Bogoroditsk Plant of Techno-Chemical Products in Tula Oblast also received a solar module manufacturing line from Spire Corporation last year (see previous ClimateIntel postings). Both Russian plants are daughter companies of the holding company OJSC Russian Electronics, which is controlled by state corporation Rostekh.
Some investments have also been undertaken in the nascent biofuel sector. OJSC RT-Biotekhprom, a wholly-owned holding company of state corporation Rostekh, announced plans to produce biofuel pellets and butanol in Arkhangelsk Oblast. The wood pellet facility will have an annual capacity of 150,000 tons and is expected to be completed in Fall 2010. The head of RT-Biotekhprom also heads an affiliated company — OJSC Biotechnologies Corporation — which is developing plans to produce two million tons of biofuel additives for motor fuels (gasoline and diesel) in the future.
The Ministry of Regional Development in September 2009 discussed a major project to promote energy efficiency in Arkhangelsk Oblast. This project seeks to convert boilers from coal and diesel to biomass (from readily available wood waste in the region) and to set up production of biofuel pellets.
As concerns hydropower, the development of small hydro power plants in the country appears to have slowed. The fund “New Energy” created in early 2007 to implement RusHydro’s 2006 program for building small hydro power (SHP) plants with new capacity of up to 300MW by 2010, has been unable to handle the task, according to a source familiar with the situation. In 2008, the fund’s portfolio included 383 prospective SHP projects with total capacity of 2.1 GW.
Prospective wind power projects are also in the news. In 2009, the Russian daughter company of Canada’s Greta Energy Inc announced plans for a 72 MW wind project in the Yeisk district of Krasnodar Krai and began negotiations with manufacturers of wind turbines and related equipment. The company plans to put three wind power facilities into commercial operations in early 2012. According to a media report, Greta Energy “plans to invest up to €250 million in its first wind farm” near Russia’s Black Sea coast. The Russian daughter company of The Netherland’s Windlife Energy is the leading developer of a 200 MW wind farm project (with 100 wind turbines) in Murmansk Oblast. This project is expected to be fully completed by the end of 2013. Various wind power projects, as well as challenges facing the industry, were discussed during the first national conference held by the Russian Wind Industry Association in mid-November 2009.
It may not take long before Russian hydrocarbon companies also begin to invest in domestic wind power projects. For example, LUKOIL, citing the Yeisk project, has publicly expressed interest in a pilot project proposed near the city of Lagan on the Caspian Sea.
However, it is less certain that the country’s wind-power capacity will reach the goal presented by RusHydro in 2008 to increase wind power capacity tenfold (from an estimated 12 MW in 2005 to a target capacity of 120 MW in 2010). The federal government’s January 2009 decree did not include specific percentages for each type of RE input (i.e., small hydro, wind, solar) to be used in electricity generation. Specific targets were in a draft decree, but these were later removed, according to a person familiar with the situation.
The future development of the renewable energy sector depends on the Ministry of Energy speeding up work on developing and adopting additional RES regulations responsive to the market. Currently, the number of finalized projects is small and the amount of government support for renewable energy is quite limited - especially when measured against the huge amounts allocated for gas and oil development projects. It will take not only the passage of new laws and favorable regulations, but also a long-term political and financial commitment to further develop the renewable energy sector before one can speak of “breakthroughs” in this area.
For further information about this topic, please contact Akin Gump.


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