Solar

Decmil threatens further action over Sunraysia solar farm dispute

Published by

Leading engineering group Decmil has threatened further action in an ongoing dispute over payments at the heavily delayed Sunraysia solar farm in New South Wales, one of dozens of large scale wind and solar projects to have their connection and commissioning pushed back by months, or in some cases years.

Decmil revealed in December that it was booking a $14 million hit to its cash flow as a result of a dispute over payments at the 200MW Sunraysia solar farm. The failure to obtain an R1 registration with the Australian Energy Market Operator, meant the solar plant, the biggest in NSW, could not proceed to formal commissioning and begin sending output to the grid.

Sunraysia – owned by John Laing and Maoneng, and located near Balranald in the south-west of the state – is one of a number of wind and solar farms that have been fully installed, but are unable to connect because of various issues – some relating to bottlenecks and restrictions on the grid, some to new connection rules, and some for other matters.

Decmil said in December that Sunraysia Solar has refused to award an extension of time and an associated adjustment to the contracted date for substantial completion. That meant it faces delays in progress payments, including the completion milestone payment, until the issue is resolved.

Last week it said the dispute is ongoing and an AEMO report on marginal loss factors released earlier this month noted that Sunraysia is still not registered.

“Decmil is continuing to pursue its rights under the disputed solar farm contract with Sunraysia,” the company said in a statement to the stock exchange. “Decmil has received robust legal advice in support of its position. If current negotiations to resolve the dispute are not successful, the dispute will move into arbitration.”

Contractual disputes similar to this have emerged all across the market, and the risk of connection and commissioning delays and the threat of “liquidated damages” imposed by developers to cover lost revenue has seen some major contractors quit the large-scale solar market in Australia.

Downer Group announced it would do no more solar farm contracting last month, declaring it is “too hard”, and Decmil is one of a number of companies thought to have also quite the full EPC contracting market, although it is still interested in “balance of plant” contracts.

Another major listed contractor, RCR Tomlinson, collapsed in late 2018 under the weight of cost over-runs and project delays in the solar sector, and Windlab has been engaged in a drawn out dispute with its EPC contractors over who should carry the cost of the delays to the Kennedy wind, solar, battery project that has now run for more than a year.

John Laing has announced it will put its Australia wind and solar portfolio on the market, declaring that the sector in Australia had become too difficult. It made a $100 million plus write down on several of its projects in the first half, largely as a result of the uncertainty and downgrades of marginal loss factors, a method of calculating transmission losses that is no longer considered fit for purpose by many in the industry.

The Sunraysia solar farm is not the only problem facing Decmil, whose shares have been suspended for several weeks following news that it had lost a contract for a prisons facility in New Zealand, and was seeking to recover between $50 and $60 million. That dispute led to the suspension of its shares and a delay in its interim accounts.

Comment has been sought from Maoneng and John Laing.

 

Giles Parkinson

Giles Parkinson is founder and editor of Renew Economy, and of its sister sites One Step Off The Grid and the EV-focused The Driven. He is the co-host of the weekly Energy Insiders Podcast. Giles has been a journalist for more than 40 years and is a former deputy editor of the Australian Financial Review. You can find him on LinkedIn and on Twitter.

Share
Published by

Recent Posts

Australia’s biggest coal state breaks new ground in wind and solar output

New South Wales has reached two remarkable renewable energy milestones that signal the growing contribution…

6 January 2025

New Year begins with more solar records, as PV takes bigger bite out of coal’s holiday lunch

As 2025 begins, Victoria is already making its mark on the energy landscape with a…

3 January 2025

What comes after microgrids? Energy parks based around wind, solar and storage

Co-locating renewable generation, load and storage offers substantial benefits, particularly for manufacturing facilities and data…

31 December 2024

This talk of nuclear is a waste of time: Wind, solar and firming can clearly do the job

Australia’s economic future would be at risk if we stop wind and solar to build…

30 December 2024

Build it and they will come: Transmission is key, but LNP make it harder and costlier

Transmission remains the fundamental building block to decarbonising the grid. But the LNP is making…

23 December 2024

Snowy Hunter gas project hit by more delays and blowouts, with total cost now more than $2 billion

Snowy blames bad weather for yet more delays to controversial Hunter gas project, now expected…

23 December 2024