www.bloomberg.com/news//2013-04-11/...pping-turkey-growth.html
offenbar revidierte Fassung ,hatte mich schon gewundert,denn sowas darf doch ohne vorherige Information durch die Firma an die Börsenaufsicht kaum veröffentlicht werden.Jetzt scheint das Vorhaben noch sehr in der Schwebe ,sie sind im Gespräch mit möglichen Partnern.Die Regierung hat bisher noch nie Zahlungen gemacht zur Unterstützung von Ansiedlungen von Firmen in der Türkei
Klingt sehr nach einem Rüffel für Ibrahim Ozarslan
Nordex, which is based in Hamburg, may invest in a rotor blade manufacturing plant in Turkey that could start producing early 2014, said Ibrahim Ozarslan, managing director of Turkish unit Nordex Enerji A.S. Vexco GmbH, a clean-energy developer, broker and financial adviser based in Bonn, said it received “several inquiries” from mid-sized companies in Germany that want to invest in solar plants in Turkey.
“Turkey is an exciting market for renewable energy developers and financiers,” Vandana Gombar, senior policy analyst for Bloomberg New Energy Finance, said by e-mail. “Companies can benefit from high prices in the wholesale power market and healthy growth in demand for electricity on the back of strong economic growth.”
German Economy Minister Philipp Roesler today finishes a three-day trip to Ankara, where he was accompanied by representatives from more than 50 companies including Germany’s biggest utility, EON SE, along with Nordex, Vexco and financiers from Deutsche Bank AG and KFW Group.
While Turkey has “strong” wind and solar resources, expansion has been held back by “complex licensing, transmission issues and perhaps more importantly a feed-in tariff that is not considered very attractive, especially for solar power,” Daniel Guttmann, head of renewable energy strategy at PWC in London, said by e-mail. Turkey’s economy grew 9.2 percent in 2010 and 8.5 percent in 2011, the fastest pace on the European continent in both years, comparative data from the Organization of Economic Cooperation and Development show. Dented by weaker demand for exports, the economy grew 2.2 percent last year, still more than double the pace of expansion in Germany.
“The Turkish market is highly interesting for German utilities as well as plant manufacturers,” Hildegard Mueller, the head of the BDEW utility lobby, which represents companies including RWE AG (RWE) and Robert Bosch GmbH, said in an interview in Ankara. “Its strategic location between Europe and Asia is especially attractive. German companies can provide their expertise with gas- as well as coal plants, renewables, energy efficiency and supply security.”
Turkey offers a feed-in tariff for renewable energy, paying premium prices to wind and solar. That’s supplemented by an additional payment for equipment produced domestically.
Nordex is in talks with officials from the Turkish Energy Ministry over the need for wider local content incentives that would benefit consumers and help kick-start more local production, Ozarslan said. So far, none of the current investors has received the payment for locally manufactured components, said Ozarslan.
“The Turkish market has huge potential,” said Ozarslan. While the company hasn’t made a final decision whether to invest in the plant, it has already talked to potential partners, he said.
Schwierige Genehmigungsverfahren und unattraktiver Einspeisungstarif sagt Guttmann Chef der erneuerbaren EnergieStrategie von PWC
auch der Export hat nachgelassen so dass die Wirtschaft im letzten Jahr nur um 2,2% wuchs