There is a track record in the UK of CfDs facilitating low carbon tech innovation and plans are now in place in Germany to use CfDs to incentivise investment in the decarbonisation of the country’s industrial sector.
What is a contract for difference?
At its most basic, a contract for difference is essentially an agreement between two parties whereby one party agrees to pay the other party the difference between the actual value of a commodity at a point in time – the market price – and a value which the parties agreed at the point the CfD was entered into – the strike price.
Where the market price is less than the strike price, one party – the first party – is required to make a top-up payment to the other party – the second party. The top-up payment is the difference between the market price and the strike price. In a two-way CfD, where the market price exceeds the strike price, the second party would be required to pay the first party the difference between market price and the strike price.
CfDs are commonly used as a means of providing price support to emerging technologies and to encourage certain behaviours, such as investment by industry in more sustainable production methods. By providing predictability of future revenue streams, they encourage investment in new technologies and methods which might otherwise take many years to be made or might not occur at all if solely reliant on market prices.
A UK perspective
CfDs were a central feature of the UK’s drive to increase the proportion of renewable electricity in its energy mix in 2014, with the award of a number of so-called ‘investment contracts’ to the developers of a number of offshore wind and biomass projects. Since then, the UK government has run three competitive allocation rounds for low carbon CfDs and to-date, some 16GW of new renewable electricity capacity, including nearly 13GW of offshore wind capacity, has been supported through CfDs.
These CfDs are private law contracts agreed by the developer of a new renewables project and the Low Carbon Contracts Company (LCCC). The LCCC is a company which is wholly owned by the UK government. The contracts offer up to 15 years’ worth of support.
Where the electricity price is below the strike price at which the developer won its CfD, the developer receives a top up to the level of the strike price. Where the electricity price exceeds the strike price, the developer pays LCCC the difference. The fact that the developer is required to make a difference payment where the market price exceeds the strike price is one of the main reasons why the UK government favours CfDs over previous feed-in tariff type support mechanisms. Their view is that they represent better value for money for taxpayers and billpayers, without compromising their ability to support development of an industry considered critical to helping the UK government achieve its legally binding target to reach net zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050.