Investment analysts are casting doubt over the New Zealand Super Fund's major offshore wind energy project.
The fund, together with Danish investment firm Copenhagen Infrastructure Partners (CIP), announced last week it would jointly investigate the feasibility of the project in the South Taranaki Bight, which has an estimated cost of $5 billion.
If feasible, an initial planned one-gigawatt development would represent over 11 per cent of New Zealand's electricity demand capacity and could power more than 650,000 homes, with power potentially delivered by the end of the decade.
But investment house Forsyth Barr said the project was "a stretch at best" and unlikely to get off the ground for two reasons: cost and size.
Its senior analyst Andrew Harvey-Green said the price tag for the project was roughly twice the cost of building an onshore wind farm.