ENERGY REVIEW
CONSULTATION RESPONSE:
DTI ENERGY REVIEW
Our Energy Challenge
Securing clean, affordable energy for the long-term
LYNNE JONES MP, April 2006
In this
submission I explain my view that we must not make ourselves dependent on nuclear power
and should plan to replace current nuclear generation of electricity by investing in
renewables, decentralised generation and energy conservation. This is a view echoed by the SERA MPs pamphlet in
response to the consultation, to which I add my support: Whats In the Mix: The
Future of Energy Policy[1]. I also
support the call for legislation to set a legally binding target of reducing carbon
dioxide emissions monitored by an annual carbon budget.
Energy Conservation
I support the submission
of the Association for the Conservation of Energy, a summary of which I enclose.
Nuclear Power
Production of nuclear electricity
is not carbon free as the production of nuclear fuel for reactors is significantly energy
intensive. Whilst most nuclear reactors
dont emit CO2 at the point of generation,
reactors are a small part of the nuclear fuel cycle, which emits large amounts of CO2. These
arise from the front end of the fuel cycle: uranium mining, ore milling,
uranium hexafluoride conversion, fuel enrichment and fabrication of fuel rods. Back end" Nuclear waste management is
energy hungry in treatment, conditioning, transportation and final disposal.
A transmission-based nuclear system
and decentralised sustainable system are effectively mutually exclusive, hence a switch to
nuclear would destroy the vision expounded in the Governments 2003 Energy White
Paper.[2]
The report, Powering London in the
21st Century[3]
also lays out a similar vision that builds on approaches adopted in Denmark and the Netherlands,
where decentralised energy provides over 50% and 40% respectively of energy supplies. Closer to home, Woking Council has cut its CO2 dramatically as a result of
decentralising its energy supplies.
Professor Gordon MacKerron, Chair
of the Committee for Radioactive Waste Management, has pointed out that nuclear is an
extreme case of lumpy investment: the nuclear industry states that it is only
worth pursuing the nuclear option if there is a commitment to 8 or 10 installations.[4]
The enormity of such a commitment will divert effort from renewables.
Micro generation
A study commissioned by the DTI
from the Energy Savings Trust suggested that, by 2050, micro generation could provide
30-40% of the UKs electricity needs. Although
I welcome the Chancellors budget announcement of £50m for micro generation, this
should be only the start of a major long-term programme that can stimulate investment in
mini and micro-generation technologies and decentralisation of the grid. For example, in California there is a $2.6 billion
programme to support photovoltaic installations on roofs.
Wave and Tidal Energy
I am concerned that the Renewables
Obligation has the effect of encouraging the cheapest form of generation, so benefiting
relatively mature technologies such as onshore wind (Woodman, 2005)[5]. As the Science and Technology
Select Committees Report from 2001 on Wave and Tidal Energy[6] pointed out, Britain has huge
potential for wave and tidal power. The Report
stated that, although there were technological barriers to its exploitation, the
Government could do more to stimulate investment in the generation of electricity from
wave and tidal energy. In its Response[7], the Government affirmed its support
for wave and tidal energy. However, the
amounts of money invested have been derisory. Between
1997 and 2004, £15 million was committed towards development of wave and tidal power. In order to bridge the funding gap between the
demonstration and pre-commercial development stage and a commercially viable form of
generation that could compete on price with wind power under the Renewables Obligation
mechanism (see above), in 2004 the DTI announced a welcome £42 million Wave and Tidal Stream Energy Demonstration Scheme
and a further £8 million for research to underpin this scheme.
These sums are minute in comparison
with the amounts - funded by government - to be spent by the Nuclear Decommissioning
Authority (NDA) on the clean-up and decommissioning of nuclear installations. Based on the 2005 LCBL[8], the cost of cleaning up Britains
legacy of domestic nuclear power will be £62.7 billion.
This figure, which represents a £5.1 billion increase over the 2004 LCBL
estimate, does not include a further £7.5bn additional costs that the NDA has identified
as being needed for the clean-up, and further billions for treatment and
storing of uranium and plutonium waste[9]. The Authority is funded by the Government to the
tune of £2 billion per annum. The Performance
and Innovation Units energy review commented that A sustained programme of
investment in currently proposed nuclear power plants could adversely affect the
development of smaller scale technologies[10].
In his high profile speech of 6
March 2001, Tony Blair quoted Shell as estimating that 50% of the world's energy
needs could be met by renewables by 2050. He
went on to state I believe the role of Government is to accelerate the development
and take up of these new technologies until self-sustaining markets take over.[11]
I quite agree but if such rhetoric is to become reality, current total
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 commitments implied in the 2001 speech have
simply not come to fruition.
Biomass
The Biomass Task Force, chaired by
Sir Ben Gill, emphasised that about one third of our energy use was for the production of
heat. Electricity or heat from biomass
provides between 3 and 6 times the CO2 reduction per pound than can be
obtained by use in the production of biofuels. There
are support mechanisms coming along on the liquid fuel side and nothing on the heat side,
ignoring a whole third of the energy equation. The
Government should accept Ben Gills modest recommendations and consider further
measures to maximise the potential of sustainable biomass, including initially for
co-generation with coal.
Carbon capture and storage
To
reduce the CO2
emissions
from our own coal consumption and to assist with the global containment of CO2
emissions from rapidly developing economies like India and China, we must invest in
advanced coal technologies that includes carbon capture and storage (CCS). The potential of CCS is explored by the Science and
Technology Committee in their First Report of Session 2005-06[12]
in which they find most of the CCS technology is already proven and available but there is
a lack of experience in integrating the component technologies at the scale required. I support the Committees call for the
Government to ensure the Energy Review puts in place a long-term incentive framework and a
policy signal to give industry the confidence to proceed.
In parallel we should be supporting a local and global move away from fossil
fuels.
Conclusion
In relation to the assessment of
all technologies, close regard must be given to the impact of the whole fuel cycle on CO2 emissions. Nuclear power is being promoted as the answer to
climate change and energy security but, 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.
[2]Our energy future
creating a low carbon economy CM 5761 February 2003
[5]Woodman (2005)
Too little too late? In The Utilities Journal Feb 2005, pp 36-7.
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