Global Renewables Transition Requires Dedicated ETRM Capabilities

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WHITE PAPER

GLOBAL RENEWABLES TRANSITION REQUIRES DEDICATED ETRM CAPABILITIES

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Global Renewables Transition Requires Dedicated ETRM Capabilities

A ComTechAdvisory Whitepaper

INTRODUCTION Renewable energy resource development is accelerating around the globe as the push to reduce carbon emissions continues to gain momentum. The Energy Information Administration (EIA) estimates that: • Wind and photovoltaic (PV) energy capacity will double from 1226 GW to approximately 2349 GW by 2025. • Global renewable capacity additions grew by more than 45% from 2019, with 110 GW of new onshore wind capacity added and 135 GW of new solar PV installed. • The share of renewables in the U.S. electricity generation mix will increase from 21% to 42% by 2050, while wind energy development is projected to be the main driver until 2025 and

solar generation will see 80% growth from 2025 through 2050 after the production tax credit (PTC) for wind expires. As the pace of renewable energy expansion quickens, market participants will continue to adjust to the commercial and financial implications as well as production variability and intermittency, reliability, and grid stability. In this white paper we will explore the changing nature of power markets, the complexities that will challenge utilities, power off-takers and traders, and the critical ETRM systems they rely on to ensure profitability.

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Global Renewables Transition Requires Dedicated ETRM Capabilities

A ComTechAdvisory Whitepaper

RENEWABLES ARE ATTRACTING NEW PLAYERS AND CHANGING INVESTMENT APPROACHES The continuing global push to decarbonize power generation is attracting increased investment funding by both traditional sources as well as new entrants that invest in green projects. Also, many of the large European banks are shifting their focus to green energy development and reducing funding for hydrocarbon-focused projects. Spurred in part by this significant shift in investment, many traditional energy producers are urgently seeking to diversify their businesses, find new sources of capital, and adopt carbon neutrality to better ensure their continuing survival during this challenging transition period. These firms, including global oil and gas producers and large utilities are now joining the ranks of new energy investors. These pivots toward carbon-neutrality and green energy are changing the funding of assets and the types of assets in development, with more wind farms, batteries, solar farms, vehicle charging stations, and biofuels coming online. Many are now directly investing in green project development or executing power purchase agreements (PPAs) in existing and new-build renewables generation. Until recently, renewables have been far more expensive to develop than traditional generation, and construction of new projects relied heavily on the availability of feed in tariffs. These government tariffs ensured renewable projects received higher than market rates to help

secure their profitability. The International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA) reports that the cost of constructing new renewable facilities has fallen sharply over the past decade due to improved technologies, economies of scale, increasingly competitive supply chains, and growing developer experience. The group’s most recent report on global renewables development notes that utility-scale solar PV power has shown the sharpest cost decline at 82%, followed by concentrating solar power (CSP) at 47%, onshore wind at 39% and offshore wind at 29%. That report also notes that costs for solar and wind power continue to drop year-over-year, with electricity costs from utility-scale solar PV seeing a 13% decrease in 2019, and reaching a global average of 6.8 cents per kilowatt-hour (kWh). Onshore and offshore wind both declined about 9%, reaching 5.3 cents/kWh and 11.5 cents/kWh, respectively. As renewable project costs decline, feed in tariffs have fallen out of favor and have been allowed to lapse or have been discontinued in some markets.

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Global Renewables Transition Requires Dedicated ETRM Capabilities

Without this financing mechanism, some renewable facilities developers in the U.S. and Europe are moving increasingly to long-term power purchase agreements (PPAs) that ensure their projects have sufficient commercial support to finance, build, and operate. The IEA estimates the use of PPAs for commercial consumers has increased from 0.3 GW in 2009 to almost 19 GW in 2019. The rapid growth is expected to accelerate as renewables development continues.1 Aiding the development of new renewable sources, regulators have mandated or encouraged the growth of carbon offset products. These include various state and regional-level emission trading programs in the U.S., and the European Union’s Emissions Trading Scheme (ETS). These authorities are also encouraging, and in some cases mandating, the development and deployment of tools and products that ensure renewable energy sources are appropriately tracked and traced for consumers wishing to purchase green energy products, or companies seeking to offset emissions. This includes: • Renewable Identification Numbers (RINs) for biofuels • Renewable Energy Certificates (RECs) for wind or solar power generation in the U.S. • Renewable Energy Guarantees of Origin certificates (REGOs / GoOs) • Renewable Obligation Certificates (ROCs) that are now in use in the United Kingdom

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A ComTechAdvisory Whitepaper

With the growth of renewable power resources, regulators and market operators in the U.S., Europe, and Asia-Pacific have increased the tenor of their intraday physical power trading markets. These new half-hour (and even 5-minute) markets help facilitate the integration of wind and solar generation assets. Almost all these renewable power sources are nondispatchable (meaning always on as long as the wind blows or the sun shines) and can be highly variable in their output. Sub-hourly intraday trading markets help ensure grid stability by encouraging development and maintenance of conventional peaking facilities that can be quickly brought online as wind declines, or cloud cover reduces solar output. For all market participants, whether merchant power generators, utilities, traders, marketers, or even commercial and industrial consumers, the increasing complexity of global power markets presents serious challenges. These markets have varying rules, processes, and types and attributes of environmental products. As such, significant operational and commercial challenges include the ability to identify the most profitable or lowest cost opportunities from asset development, origination, trading, and marketing, the need to model complex energy agreements such as PPAs, manage the numerous risks across these markets, and interface and interact with a diverse array of external systems. Addressing these challenges requires a modern technical infrastructure of sophisticated and agile software.

https://www.iea.org/data-and-statistics/charts/global-ppa-volumes-by-sector-2009-2019

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Global Renewables Transition Requires Dedicated ETRM Capabilities

The ongoing energy transition is driving change across a variety of fronts. This creates challenges for market participants but also provides opportunities to innovate and gain competitive advantage.

A ComTechAdvisory Whitepaper

Innovation will require systems, including energy trading and risk management (ETRM) solutions, to address new and emerging requirements and needs.

MANAGING PPA CONTRACTS, AND OTHER ASSETS WITH YOUR ETRM PPAs have become a common method to finance projects for asset owners. They also provide utilities, industrial consumers, and marketers an opportunity to increase their portfolio of both marketable power and green power certificates such as RECs, REGOs, and GoOs. The specific nature of these projects and their related PPA attributes are a unique mixture of contract clauses that can be complex to model and value. This uniqueness comes from a host of attributes that includes: • Facility type and underlying generation technology • Geographic/market location • Capacity, projected availability, and ability to provide ancillary services • Commercial strategies and risk tolerances (including price, volume, profile, etc.) of the developer and/or the off taker

Currently, virtually all PPAs are a unique blend of negotiated commercial and operational terms, making it complex to model and manage a portfolio. Among the complexities of PPAs are a variety of pricing structures, including: • Linear pricing, fixed, index or formula • Non-linear pricing which can include any number of variable pricing structures such as collars, floors, and other clauses like excluding negative price situations

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Global Renewables Transition Requires Dedicated ETRM Capabilities

A ComTechAdvisory Whitepaper

Examples of common PPA pricing structure components

*Very common to see a combination of the above pricing components in relation to specific volumes or timeframe, as well as combination with other adjustments like inflation escalation, availability constraints, etc.

The PPA will also address contracted delivery obligation which can be broadly viewed as fixed or variable. However, several volumetric subcategories also exist: • Fixed volumes: Baseload volumes as a fixed hourly delivery profile or a fixed volume by period in which the operator must deliver and the buyer must take a fixed volume during a defined period. • Variable volume agreements: Can include pay-as-

produced or route-to-market. These agreements typically do not contain minimum volume obligations for the producers. • Pay-as-forecasted volumes: Producer has no minimum delivery requirements, but must pay compensation if actuals fall short of forecasts. • In addition, certain curtailment clauses can further complicate the volume delivery obligation.

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Global Renewables Transition Requires Dedicated ETRM Capabilities

A ComTechAdvisory Whitepaper

Examples of typical variability of volume delivery obligation

*Very common to see a combination of the above components in relation to specific volumes or certain timeframe, as well as combination with other adjustments like inflation escalation, availability constraints, etc.

In addition, many contracts may contain two or more of the structures defined above. The pricing, or volumetric obligations by either buyer or seller, may also be tiered. For buyers and sellers, risk varies and is based on the terms of the agreement. For example, with an index-

priced contract, the producer and off-taker will be exposed to price volatility. Producers bear risk with a fixed volume agreement. This means that if the wind abates at a wind farm or cloud cover reduces output at a solar plant, the producer must replace shortfall deliveries at current market prices or incur penalties.

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Global Renewables Transition Requires Dedicated ETRM Capabilities

A ComTechAdvisory Whitepaper

SOFTWARE IS CRITICAL TO DRIVE PROFITABILITY IN TODAY’S RENEWABLES MARKETS For all renewable market participants, structuring, capturing, managing, optimizing, and valuing renewable assets is becoming increasingly complex. Without the right software tools these challenges may be insurmountable. PPA buyers and sellers have several critical software requirements around ensuring profitability of their renewable investment. Prior to project execution, asset investment analysis needs to be supported with the right scenario capabilities to evaluate flexibility of such a real option, for example to evaluate return on investment in colocating battery storage with your wind farm. During contract negotiation a flexible, but sophisticated solution needs to provide scenario analysis and evaluation capability to support contract structuring. Price caps/floors, fees, volume uncertainty, and volume constraints that are under consideration for the PPA contract terms need to be analyzed prior to signing the final agreement. After execution, a sophisticated ETRM solution needs to support the PPA contract lifecycle: From deal capture, risk management, reporting, settlements and invoicing, market participants need solutions that can handle the unique characteristics of executed PPAs,

including: • Complex, potentially non-linear pricing including caps and/or floors for volume and pricing • Efficient time series and volume management to update frequently production forecast, import actual off-takes, and volume corrections • Flexible scenario capabilities to support hedging and other portfolio analysis • Automation of settlements and related invoicing process • Value and management of PPA related green certificates throughout their own trading lifecycle, from trade capture, risk, reporting, registry reconciliation, settlements to back office As regulators exercise more influence on the renewable certificates markets, the trading and profitable management of these will become a more common and pressing issue for virtually all power market participants. It requires the ability to value and manage those certificates throughout their trading lifecycle, from capture, risk management, reporting and settlement in the back office, and must reflect

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Global Renewables Transition Requires Dedicated ETRM Capabilities

their unique characteristics. As more certificates are linked with PPAs, additional needs will arise. This includes integrating with the appropriate certificate registries, inventory management (including registry account management and reporting with appropriate identification numbers, quantities, dates, etc.). Given their variable generation output, renewable resources generally require balancing trading activities. This increases both the number of trades and traded

A ComTechAdvisory Whitepaper

volumes in intraday markets, and significantly burdens trading and support staff and the systems they utilize in terms of processing time and number of transactions. For companies that utilize algorithmic trading tools, such as those that operate across many of the European markets, these renewable resources and the ETRM solutions that manage them will need to be integrated with the algo solutions (providing input and digesting resulting trading volumes), which will in turn increase the volume of data movements significantly.

ION SOLUTIONS FOR POWER AND RENEWABLES A robust ETRM that brings together traditional and renewables related trading and risk management activities is necessary to support companies in their energy transition. The ETRM must also provide the right level of sophistication to support the complexities of renewables and cover asset classes like power and certificates, support variability in contract terms, longlived agreements, and significant increases in trading activities and related data volumes. ION Commodities leverages their comprehensive, market-leading ETRM portfolio, and couples it with enhanced functionality to address the complexities of the evolving energy and renewables market. This approach ensures users have comprehensive front-toback-office capabilities to address the most difficult challenges they might face when managing renewables as part of a larger portfolio of energy products. ION Commodities also provides prebuilt interfaces for ensuring renewables market participants can quickly integrate with both internal and external systems such as ERPs, algo trading systems, and TSOs, to ensure efficiency and profitability.

ION solutions focused on power and renewables: Best suited for global diversified companies in multiple commodities with advanced risk management requiring flexibility and scalability • Best-in-class capabilities for power & renewables with full lifecycle coverage • Strong power & utility client base with active user group for collaboration, innovation and roadmap direction • Packaged solutions for certificates

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Global Renewables Transition Requires Dedicated ETRM Capabilities

trading, data series management and intraday trading Best suited for regional and multiregional utilities that are diversifying their power generation to renewables • Best-in-class capabilities for power & renewables with full lifecycle coverage • Strong power & utility client base in North America and Europe • Dedicated modules environmental products, intraday trading and standard FEA integration Asset and investment optimization, structuring analytics and decision support for companies investing and contracting in renewables • FEA standalone or as a complementary solution with Openlink and Allegro ION Commodities’ dedicated renewables capabilities: • Asset/contract evaluation for analyzing structured agreements, asset and investment pricing, and scenario analytics • Trading and hedging capabilities for physical and financial power and RECs, GoOs and Carbon certificates • Asset and contract modeling for capturing complex PPAs, offer management, time-series management, linking certificates, and complex pricing

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• Middle-office evaluation and analytics including complex pricing models, results engine, and scenario and stress testing • Dedicated time series capability to streamline volume management • Advanced inventory management capabilities for registry accounts, forecasting, evaluations, actualization, and reconciliations of all traded certificates • Automation of settlement processes and correction payments ION Commodities has invested heavily in ensuring their customers can operate successfully in the changing energy markets. New time series data tool ensures clients can easily upload volumes and manipulate these directly in the ETRM. PPA contracts often exhibit extended invoicing cycles. Correction payments and volume reconciliations, a typical pain point for PPAs invoicing, have been improved to allow full automation of PPAs settlements and keep oversight in these long invoicing cycles. A new intraday trading module supports growing trading activity around renewables and reduces data load within the CTRM by up to 90%. The robust risk and financial management tools drive profitably, improve decision making and quickly help firms pivot and manage the changing dynamics of the energy market. ION continuously innovates in close cooperation with its user groups to ensure the roadmap addresses the emerging needs of its users as they continue to grow and adapt to a rapidly changing market.

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Global Renewables Transition Requires Dedicated ETRM Capabilities

A ComTechAdvisory Whitepaper

ION Commodities – Overview renewable power solution coverage

Benefits of ION’s renewable solutions • Leverage ION investment – Best in class power, environmental & renewable business coverage, leading commodity management solutions with focus on energy transition • Future proven – Ability to support future energy transition phases like new markets, contract types, trading volumes, other renewables and related processes • Flexibility and extensibility – Ability to extend

the solution to your own specific processes, business logic and requirements to handle todays and future needs • Platform for growth – Acquire the right scalable and extendable solution from the beginning to avoid tactical solution replacement in the future • Strong client community – Focused on renewable transition and environmental products, active user group for collaboration and product roadmap direction

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ABOUT ION COMMODITIES We’re transforming the world of commodities through innovation. Our mission is to understand the diverse and changing needs of your energy and commodities business and meet those needs with advanced technology. Wherever you are, and whatever industry you’re in, ION Commodities solutions put you in complete control. With decades of knowledge and experience, we can provide proven solutions to the challenges you’re facing. That’s why over 30,000 users worldwide have partnered with ION to sharpen their decision-making and boost their productivity. Want to know more? Contact us at: commodities@iongroup.com commodities.iongroup.com


ABOUT Commodity Technology Advisory LLC Commodity Technology Advisory is the leading analyst organization covering the ETRM and CTRM markets. We provide the invaluable insights into the issues and trends affecting the users and providers of the technologies that are crucial for success in the constantly evolving global commodities markets. Patrick Reames and Gary Vasey head our team, whose combined 60-plus years in the energy and commodities markets, provides depth of understanding of the market and its issues that is unmatched and unrivaled by any analyst group. For more information, please visit:

www.comtechadvisory.com ComTech Advisory also hosts the CTRMCenter, your online portal with news and views about commodity markets and technology as well as a comprehensive online directory of software and services providers. Please visit the CTRMCenter at:

www.ctrmcenter.com

19901 Southwest Freeway Sugar Land TX 77479 +1 281 207 5412 Prague, Czech Republic +420 775 718 112 ComTechAdvisory.com Email: info@comtechadvisory.com


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