Countrypaul wrote: ↑Mon Apr 08, 2024 10:50 am
Yuff wrote: ↑Mon Apr 08, 2024 6:07 am
Have I got this right, if someone builds a WT or a solar farm and they are paid more than 7.5p /kwh for what they produce,they pay 45% tax on the surplus.
I assume this will have been agreed by some quango who were being subsidised by Saudi armaco……
That should get lots of interest.
That almost as dumb as charging EV owners 80-90p /kwh at public chargers including vat at 20%.
They wonder why EV sales are slowing
They need to produce over 50GWh/yr and various expenses are also deductable, and does not apply if there is a CfD in place etc. It's a goverment thing so never as simple as it could be...
There is also indexing on the 7.5p rate but it is on the whole income (not profit) with a £10m allowance. Expenses have to be exceptional, not the normal running costs.
Europe also have a tax but it only kicks in at around 16p / kWh.
The point I was trying to make is that for KH (to an extent) and for P4 the idea that you could get a rebate of similar in size to the GF 27p / kWh is unlikely in the event of war or whatever because there would be likely windfall taxes imposed. Either with the current rules or new ones.
Ofgem has made it very clear they want to decouple wholesale prices from gas which means CFDs, long term PPAs or punitive charges. So for wind per kWh you need 2p for operating expenses, 1p for capital repayment, 1p for finance and 1p to 2p for profit. Therefore a regulated price of onshore wind would be expected to be around 5p to 6p / kWh and a CFD gives you that guaranteed with indexing.
Without a CFD there is no protection from low gas prices or the imposition of locational pricing. On the upside, if the revenues grow too much, windfall taxes may lower the returns to a similar rate of a CFD.
GF members have had the comfort of being outside of the windfall tax rules, imagine if GF was caught and there was no allowance, that 27p rebate would have been reduced to around 14p and we are now around 6p and maybe next year 5p based on the current year ahead prices. Would 14p in exceptional conditions be enough to throw away the one off option of a CFD.