Subsea Cables Demand Good News for Supply Sector
More than 1,100 new submarine electricity cable systems are planned from 2012 to 2020, according to a new market research report.
The small and highly specialized high-voltage submarine cable market is expected to see significant growth in the coming years. National governments and regional organizations are accelerating efforts to build offshore renewable power generation facilities, link remote landmasses, and interconnect their national grids. According to a recent report from Pike Research , a part of Navigant’s Energy Practice, more than 1,100 new submarine electricity cable systems are planned from 2012 to 2020.
“The high-voltage submarine market faces significant challenges moving forward,” says senior research director Bob Gohn. “The current supply chain is only capable of fulfilling about half of the planned cables over the next five years. The submarine cable manufacturing market has steep barriers to entry, and is unlikely to grow by leaps and bounds in the coming five years. Thus, nearly all aspects of the existing market are likely to face delays, increased costs, and other difficulties.”
Faced with these realities, submarine transmission project developers are beginning their conversations with cable suppliers early in the planning stages, according to the report. Cables that do not get their place in the production line will face increased costs that could easily push projects over budget. Additional market players, or increased capacity from existing players, would allow the submarine power cable industry to come significantly closer to meeting the high demand in their extremely specialized market.
The report, “Submarine Electricity Transmission” , provides a comprehensive analysis of the worldwide market opportunity for submarine high-voltage DC and AC power cable projects, including an assessment of demand drivers and supply chain dynamics, both now and in the years ahead.