As I’ve mentioned a few times, geothermal looks to be approaching a rolling boil.
A few more positive indicators on the sector presented themselves over the past week.
First came news last week that the state of Alaska will reduce royalty rates for geothermal projects on state lands. Previously, state geothermal royalties had been set at a towering 10 to 15% of gross revenues. Under the new legislation, this will fall to 1.75% during the first ten years of income-generating production. After ten years, the rate increases modestly to 3.5%.
There have been a number of signpost events in the geothermal sector recently.
A few months ago I discussed the emerging trend of advanced-stage geothermal projects being bought by major players in the sector such as Ormat.
This is a major boost for Alaskan geothermal. A 10% royalty is hefty, even for more established industries like crude oil and gas. It would push most geothermal projects to the brink of viability.
More importantly, the rate change is a sign that things are happening in the sector. The Alaskan government didn’t decide on the shift out of the blue. They are seeing increased geothermal activity, which necessitated the policy re-think.
Case in point being geothermal major Ormat Technologies, which announced last week that it will accelerate work on its Mount Spurr geothermal leases in Alaska. The project will likely see drilling of the first test wells this year.
This is a groundbreaking move from the DOE. And a potential game-changer for the industry.
One of the big challenges for junior geothermal players is the leap from exploration to production. Building a power plant is a big expense, requiring significant debt financing. However, most small geothermal players have few assets to finance against, other than some holes in the ground and a bunch of temperature data.
As such, these companies have historically been mauled on rates for their project debt. They’ve often been forced to go to non-traditional funding sources, which charge interest rates ranging up to 15%. A serious cost of capital.
DOE loans like the one to U.S. Geothermal will carry ultra-low interest rates. Giving qualifying project developers a big leg up in making the jump to production.
Revolutions never happen over night. They build over years, with the signals going from subtle to strong. Judging from the geothermal news lately, we’re getting toward the latter.