RESPONSE TO THE CONSULTATION ON THE UK RENEWABLE
ENERGY STRATEGY
Lynne
Jones MP
September 2008
Another consultation document
I entirely agree with the
Government that we need to radically reduce greenhouse gas emissions and to diversify our
energy sources and that measures are needed to save energy and address fuel poverty. However, I am disappointed at the slow progression
through yet another consultation document that seems to accept that it will take several
more years before the necessary measures have any chance of being put in place. Meanwhile, our European neighbours forge ahead in the
expansion of renewable energy. I am therefore a signatory to Early Day
Motion 1919, which welcomes the long-awaited policy initiative that the UK Renewable
Energy Strategy consultation contains, but urges the Government to pursue the expansion of
all forms of renewable energy with the utmost urgency, rather than waiting until 2010. A copy of this EDM is appended.
Radical action needed
Climate change is the
most important challenge for humanity, requiring urgent and radical action. We will need to work extremely hard if we are to
reach the EU target of producing 15% of the Country's energy from renewable sources by
2020.
The Governments
consultation document concedes that the target will only be achievable if there is a
completely new approach to generating energy. I
agree and our strategy must focus on bold commitments and on reinforcing our ambition for
domestic renewables. I am alarmed by reports
that the Government wants British investments in renewable energy anywhere in the world to
count as part of the UKs effort. Whilst
such investments are welcome, we should not be
attempting to either
dilute the EU targets or change the way the target is calculated.
The Government
proposes to help kick-start emerging technologies by removing all barriers to generation
of renewables and providing substantial incentives. I
note that loans and grants will be made available for people and businesses to install
green technologies such as solar thermal units and heat pumps. While this is to be welcomed, I would contend that,
unless generous funding is allocated to the scheme and the loans and grants are easily
obtainable, this proposal by itself will be insufficient to encourage the levels of
microgeneration that will be needed. One of
the advantages of the feed-in tariff system, considered below, is that there is less need
for subsidised loans and grants, as many people will be able to finance loans with the
income from the tariff.
Feed-in tariffs welcomed
I welcome the
Governments recognition of the potential benefit of a UK system of feed-in tariffs. I believe that feed-in tariffs backed up by a
national programme of installation of smart meters, on a par with the nationwide
conversion from coal gas to North Sea gas, would make a significant contribution to
meeting the UK's renewable target. I am one of 281 MPs who signed
Early Day Motion 890, which calls on the Government to adopt feed-in tariffs. A copy of this EDM is appended.
I was pleased when, last
November, Gordon Brown appeared to back feed-in tariffs, indicating that it should be
"made easier for people to generate their own
energy through microgeneration, and sell it on to the grid". However, little has happened since and there was no
inclusion of feed-in tariffs in the recent Energy Bill.
I supported Alan
Simpsons amendment to establish a renewable energy feed-in
tariff that would have rewarded consumers for each kilowatt hour of energy exported
back onto the public gas or electricity network from a renewable source. I note that this amendment had strong cross
party support; however, it was met with stiff resistance from the Government. In a sign of the strength of feeling on this
matter: when it came to vote on the Bill, 33 Labour MPs defied the whips and voted against
the Government.
The consultation document says that the
Government will give consideration to feed-in tariffs. I would strongly urge the Government to move from
such a half-hearted response and commit to a feed-in tariff for microgeneration and
community renewables as a matter of urgency. Feed-in tariffs have been
successfully introduced in many EU countries and have led to rapid increases in the
deployment of technologies such as solar power. The
UK, with our system of Renewable
Obligation Certificates (ROCs), currently lags far behind all our
main EU neighbours.
We generate
only 4% of our electricity from renewables, primarily hydropower, a figure that has
changed very little over the past few years, in spite of a succession of energy bills.
In July 2007, The Environment, Food and Rural
Affairs Committee, of which I am a member, called for a feed-in tariff to be introduced to
support small scale renewables. We recommended
that: the Government replaces ROCs and export
payments with a single fixed rate per KWh, varying according to the type of generation. The relevant section of the Report, Climate Change: Citizens Agenda is appended.
The German Model
The
German model
of feed-in tariffs has proven to be extremely effective for boosting adoption of renewable
energy technologies. Germany currently
produces 15% of its electricity from renewable sources, compared to the UK's 4%.
I urge the
Government to adopt the same approach for the UK, as has been so successful in Germany,
where householders are well-rewarded for feeding the electricity they produce from
microgeneration into the national grid. For
example, the rate of these feed-in tariffs for photovoltaic panels has fuelled their rapid
expansion and, though there is as yet no mechanism for paying for heat, a premium rate for
systems that make use of waste heat from electricity generation has encouraged combined
heat and power. Furthermore, higher production helps push prices down sharply. Last year, Ashley Seager reported in The Guardian that: A typical 3kw PV system costs about £17,000 in Britain
but less than £10,000 in Germany. The German Deputy Environment
Minister, Matthias Machnig, has said that the German feed-in tariff has had the effect of
creating new, world-class industries resulting in 250,000 jobs and billions of euros of
exports a year.
One of the
arguments the Government has deployed against the feed-in tariff system is that it is too
expensive. However, Germany has shown that
action against climate change and economic growth can
go together. Evidence to the above-mentioned Environment, Food and Rural Affairs
Committee Report was that the average annual cost
per customer of the German feed-in tariff is about £12, compared with about £7 for the
ROC system. But, importantly, the German
system supports far more renewable generation.
UK Government
incentives to householders have so far failed to persuade many to invest in renewable
energy. The Government currently gives grants to help with the initial costs, but these
are too small and too restricted to be effective and people are naturally put off by the
bureaucracy involved and the high initial cost of buying and installing them. In comparison, German households and businesses that
generate renewable energy can sell it back to the grid at more than triple the market
price, which means that they have a reason to install microgeneration technologies that goes beyond environmental
conscientiousness.
Solar
Energy
I concur with the view of Solarcentury, a company specialising in solar
energy, that there seems to be very limited ambition for solar photovoltaics (PV)
contained in the consultation document. The
2020 target should mean that the UK needs significant contributions from all proven
renewable energy technologies, which includes solar thermal (already reasonably
cost-effective) and solar PV. I have installed
solar thermal in my constituency home and solar photovoltaics, as well as a 1kw wind
system, in an off-grid property in Wales so I have direct experience of the effectiveness
of these technologies.
In 2006 the President of Japan's Sharp Corporation, the world's biggest maker of
solar cells, stated that he expected the cost of generating solar power to halve by 2010,
halve again by 2020, and to be comparable with that of nuclear power generation by 2030. The projected drop in photovoltaic prices is in
line with the timescale of power from a proposed new round of nuclear build in the UK
coming on stream. To my mind, this simply adds
to the case against nuclear power, which I will discuss in more depth below.
As outlined by Solarcentury (in their response to the
consultation), the global installed solar PV market is forecast to reach 11 GWp per annum
by 2012.- the equivalent of 4.4 million domestic solar PV installations a year. At the current rate of solar PV growth in the UK,
the UK share of that global market will be just 0.1%. It
seems illogical for the Government to effectively turn its back on a global market
projected to be growing by 80% by 2012, especially in the context of the EU's 2020
targets.
Last year, the estimate
is that just 270 solar photovoltaic panels were installed in Britain's homes, compared
with 130,000 in Germany. This May, David Orr,
Chief Executive of the National Housing Federation told MPs on the Environmental Audit
Committee that, at the current rate, it would take the UK 1,500 years to equal the number Germany
already has. He went on: One
of the consequences of that is that solar panels cost half what they cost in the UK
because the supply chain is geared up to delivering them and there are 10,000 people
involved in producing them - a really good employment generator.
Nuclear Power
not needed
Nuclear
power has often been promoted as the answer to climate change and energy security but I
would argue that, given determined and long-term investment, a combination of energy
conservation and renewable energy sources could meet all our needs without the security
risks associated with nuclear generation.
I
was therefore disappointed to note that, in the consultation document, the Government says
that they will invest more in renewable energy in the UK, alongside other low carbon sources such as nuclear
power. It is also stated that active steps
will be taken to open up the way to the
construction of new nuclear power stations.
This is apparently now to be done through foreign-owned companies. I would argue that there has already been a great
deal of investment in nuclear power, whilst investment in renewables has been risible. Funding for renewables
should be of a similar order to that which was available to the nuclear industry during
its period of peak research and construction.
The Governments
Energy White Paper of 2003, Our energy future:
creating a low carbon economy, spelled out an exciting vision with which I
entirely agreed: it set out policies focused on energy efficiency, renewable technologies
and a decentralised energy system, where energy was both generated and consumed at a local
level. Since then there has been a failure to
make investment in energy efficiency and renewable energy technologies on the scale that is needed, resulting in a reversion to
old-fashioned policies reliant on nuclear power.
Renewables,
including, wind, wave, solar and
tidal power, could deliver much more electricity than any new fleet of nuclear
reactors - and more quickly. Renewable heat
from solar thermal, ground and air source heat pumps and waste/biomass could replace much
of our use of oil and gas for heating. But the
potential of these sources needs to be harnessed now if we are going to end our dependence
on fossil fuels and reduce carbon emissions. Ambitious
support for renewables will bring benefits - not just of clean energy, but of the jobs and
economic growth that come from pioneering new industries and technology.
A National
Strategy for the Current Financial Climate and Towards Peak Oil
The current financial
climate may affect people's enthusiasm for making choices based on environmental
considerations but expectations of high fuel prices will encourage people to look to
energy efficiency to reduce their bills and to view clean energy technologies as having
the potential to be more competitive in future than continuing to rely on imported fossil
fuels.
Thus more and more
people will be considering installing micro-generation systems in their homes and
communities. This will be less of an option
for those on low and modest incomes. The
Government should therefore adopt a system that provides generous grants to people
on low incomes (either individually or in community schemes or via social landlords/local
authorities) and guarantees to give those with sufficient income to raise loans a
reasonable return over the period of the investment, as is the case with the German
feed-in tariff system. The strategy should
support community schemes and investment on a street by street basis, rather than
pepperpotting. Urban renewal
envelope and block contracts, as took place in the 1980s through local authorities working
with private contractors, could be a model for this.
Conclusion
A
huge expansion of renewables is required to meet the EU-wide target of 20% renewable
energy by 2020. The Government notes in the
consultation document that the UKs target to achieve15% of our energy from
renewables is a ten-fold increase in renewable energy generation from where we are now. Much of this will come from large scale projects
such as on- and off-shore wind farms and wave and tidal power. However, a substantial contribution could be made by
small-scale renewable technologies such as solar panels on roofs or community combined
heat and power derived from household waste. Many
large and small businesses could also generate much of their own heat and power through
on-site renewable technologies. Without the
adoption of the feed-in tariff mechanism to support domestic and community
microgeneration, the Government will fail
to demonstrate its commitment to the EU renewables target.
LYNNE JONES MP
September 2008
Appendix
EDM 1919
RENEWABLE ENERGY STRATEGY
That this House congratulates the Government on the publication of the UK Renewable
Energy Strategy consultation; welcomes the long-awaited policy initiative that it
contains; and urges the Government to pursue the expansion of all forms of renewable
energy with the utmost urgency, rather than waiting until 2010.
EDM 890
FEED-IN TARIFFS FOR RENEWABLE ELECTRICITY
That this House notes that
massive expansion of renewable energy generating capacity is essential in order to cut the
UK's carbon emissions significantly and to meet the EU renewable energy targets; further
notes that the UK generates just five per cent. of its electricity from renewable sources;
recognises that many European countries have adopted a feed-in tariff system with
considerable success, paying a long-term, guaranteed premium price for renewable
electricity exported to the grid; appreciates that a feed-in tariff has played a
transformational role in Germany which now generates 13 per cent. of its electricity from
renewable sources and employs 236,000 people in the renewable energy sector; further notes
the finding of the Stern Review that `comparisons between deployment support through
tradeable quotas and feed-in tariff price support suggest that feed-in mechanisms achieve
larger deployment at lower costs'; believes that there is an urgent need for a feed-in
tariff to support smaller scale renewable electricity schemes; recognises that a UK
feed-in tariff could work alongside other policy mechanisms that support large scale
renewable electricity generation; and calls on the Government to introduce the necessary
enabling powers for a feed-in tariff in the current Energy Bill and give a commitment to
introduce, following appropriate consultation, a UK feed-in tariff to support smaller
non-merchant renewable electricity generation
The Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Committee: Climate Change: Citizens Agenda
FEED-IN TARIFFS
126. As well as placing a duty upon the Secretary of State to report annually on the
level of emissions of greenhouse gases in the United Kingdom and on the steps taken to
reduce emissions, the Climate Change and Sustainable Energy Act 2006 places an obligation
on energy suppliers to develop a scheme by October 2007 for paying for exports of
electricity to the national grid, for example from domestic microgeneration.
Renewables
Obligation
The Renewables Obligation (RO) was
introduced by the Government in 2002 and defines the amount of electricity energy
suppliers must provide from renewable sources of energy. The original target was 10.4% by
2010/11. The Energy White Paper confirms the Government's aim to double this to 20% by
2020.[180]
Compliance with the RO is demonstrated by suppliers presenting Renewables Obligation
Certificates (ROCs) to Ofgem or by paying into a 'buyout' fund. ROCs were issued to
accredited generators for eligible renewable electricity generated within the UK and
supplied to customers in Great Britain. They can be traded to allow electricity suppliers
to meet their targets at the lowest cost. |
127. B&Q expressed concern about the "reluctance of
energy suppliers" to engage in 'reverse selling', i.e. to offer a fair price for any
electricity exported back to the grid by householders.[181]
According to figures provided by Alan Simpson MP, there is currently a large degree of
disparity between suppliers in terms of the price paid back to customers for any surplus
energy they wish to sell back to the grid. Only npower currently buys energy back at the
same price at which it sells it for. Ofgem said that it is "supporting and
participating in a project under the auspices of the Electricity Networks Strategy
Group" to address this issue, which, it says, is "one of the key pre-requisites
for the greater penetration of microgeneration in the market". [182]
Ofgem told us that "we have warned the companies that if they do not sort out selling
back we will basically put on the regulatory hobnails and sort it out for them".[183]
According to the Energy White Paper 2007 "All six major energy suppliers have now
committed to publishing easily accessible export tariffs."[184]
During our visit to Wales, Ian Draisey, Marketing Director at Dulas Ltd. told us that
feed-in tariffs were needed to make renewable technologies commercially viable for large
numbers of households. At present between 10 and 100 times the current number of customers
wanted to install microgeneration technology but couldn't justify the cost.
128. During our visit to Germany we heard about the Renewable
Energy Sources Act (Erneuerbare-Energien-Gesetz, or EEG), through which a premium
"feed-in tariff" is paid to microgenerators for electricity generated from
renewable energy sources. The level of premium depends on the year of installation, but
once determined remains constant, and is guaranteed for 20 years. For example,
photovoltaics generate between 38-54 cents per kWh depending on their location. All
the electricity generated is fed back into the grid, so the householder is paid for every
kWh of renewable energy generated, and purchases all electricity used at a lower rate
(approximately 18.6 cents/kWh in 2005) from the energy supplier. The German
Renewable Energy Act is funded through 3% of the price per kWh paid by the consumer to the
electricity supplierloosely equivalent to 1.55 per month (about £12 per year)
for an average household consuming 3,500 kWh per year.[185]
By comparison, the Renewables Obligation cost the average UK household £7.35 per year in
2006-07. Projections by Ofgem predict that this will increase to £11.41 by 2010-11 based
on 2006 prices.[186]
Although there is no public subsidy required for the German 'feed in tariff' system, this
scheme is still paid for by electricity customers since the costs borne by energy
suppliers are simply passed onin 2005, the net cost to consumers was 2.3 billion
Euros (approx £1.6bn).[187]
According to German Government figures, the total emissions saved by renewables in Germany
was 84 million tonnes of CO2 in 2005.
129. A clear majority of European Member States operate a feed-in
tariff support system for renewable technologies, as opposed to the tradable certificate
system such as the Renewables Obligation that operates in the UK. The German feed-in
tariff structure has stimulated demand for microgeneration technologies to the extent that
at least 170,000 jobs have been created (2005 figures), an increase of 10% on the previous
year.[188]
Germany is increasing its renewable energy output faster than expected, and in July 2007
announced that it has already met its 2010 indicative target to supply 12.5% of
electricity from renewables.[189]
During our visit to Germany we heard that the feed-in tariff system had been so successful
in Denmark that it had already met its 2010 target for renewable energy generation. By
comparison, renewables only contributed 4% to the UK's electricity supply in 2005, against
a target of 10% by 2010.[190]
According to data from Ofgem, only 57 of the 975 generators accredited to receive
Renewables Obligation Certificates (ROCs) were small generators (below 50kW), and were
accredited to individuals as opposed to businesses.[191]
130. The UK Government is committed to the Renewables Obligation,
and ruled out fixing the price paid for renewable generation from its recent review of
this policy.[192]
Feed-in tariffs were not mentioned in the review's consultation document. However, the
then Minister of State, Ian Pearson MP, observed that: "[t]he point about selling
energy back into the grid and making it easier for people to be able to do that I think is
a very important one, it has a symbolic importance as well as a financial one and we need
to get this sorted out."[193]
In May 2007, the Government conceded that the Renewables Obligation was "designed to
support large scale deployment of renewables and we do not feel that it is the best way to
deliver the incentives that the microgeneration industry require".[194]
131. The current system of Renewable Obligation Certificates
(ROCs) for individual householders is too unwieldy for microgeneration, and risks losing
citizen engagement. We recommend the Government replace ROCs and export payments with a
feed-in tariff with a single fixed rate per kWh, varying according to the type of
generation.
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