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Chaos envelops coalition’s green policies

The High Court has ordered a judicial review of the government’s proposals to cut feed-in tariff payments for solar photovoltaic installations.

With the Committee on Climate Change also saying this week that there is no way the Green Deal will work, as presently designed, government plans to reduce UK carbon emissions are falling into disarray.

FiTs cut challenge success

Following a legal challenge by Friends of the Earth and two solar firms, Solarcentury and HomeSun, the High Court agreed yesterday afternoon that proposals to cut feed-in tariff payments for any solar scheme completed after 12 December, eleven days before the current consultation closes tomorrow, were unlawful.

Friends of the Earth’s executive director Andy Atkins said the “botched” proposals were “jeopardising thousands of jobs”.

“Ministers must now come up with a sensible plan that protects the UK’s solar industry and allows cash-strapped homes and businesses to free themselves from expensive fossil fuels by plugging into clean energy,” he said.

He agreed with the government that “solar payments should fall in line with falling installation costs”, which have almost halved in the last two years, “but the speed of the government’s proposals threatened to devastate the entire industry”.

Jeremy Leggett, chairman of Solarcentury, also welcomed the decision, saying: “We encourage the secretary of state to accept the judges’ very clear ruling, not plunge the industry into a further period of uncertainty by considering going to appeal”.

There seemed to be no sign of that happening last night. Climate change minister Greg Barker said the government would be seeking an appeal, and hoped to secure a hearing as soon as possible.

“Regardless of today’s outcome, the current high tariffs for solar PV are not sustainable and changes need to be made in order to protect the budget which is funded by consumers through their energy bills,” he added.

FoE is also calling for more money to encourage solar installations, to be paid for by the revenue the industry raises for the Treasury, the removal of planned restrictions that would prevent poorer households from installing solar panels and more support for community-owned schemes.

Green Deal “will fail”

On Monday, Lord Adair Turner, who announced this week that he is resigning as chair of the Committee on Climate Change in order to focus on his role as chair of the Financial Services Authority (FSA), wrote to Greg Barker and the secretary of state Chris Huhne, expressing concern about the detail of the Green Deal and Energy Company Obligation (ECO).

He slammed the current proposals as being “an inefficient way of spending ECO funding”, which would not cut energy bills for householders or enable the government to meet its carbon budgets.

He pointed out that DECC’s own draft Impact Assessment projects show that between 2013 and 2020, six million lofts and 6.3 million cavity walls must be insulated.

But the government itself estimates that just 700,000 lofts and 1.7 million cavity walls will be insulated under the ECO.

Yet this policy is supposed to account for much of the cost-effective potential to improve energy efficiency in the residential sector.

Lord Turner therefore proposes that the current Carbon Emissions Reduction Target (CERT)’s targets for insulating lofts and cavity walls be included in its proposed replacement, the ECO.

This would make it much more likely that target emission reductions would be achieved (e.g. 4-5 MtCO2 in 2020, rather than 2 MtCO2 as currently projected).

Lord Turner adds, “a less energy efficient housing stock would raise costs and risks of investing in renewable heat” (under the Renewable Heat Incentive), because electric heat pumps work less efficiently in poorly insulated homes.

He rejected DECC’s argument in the impact assessment that including loft and cavity wall insulation in the ECO would crowd out the Green Deal finance, saying that there is enough money to achieve this if the energy companies and Green Deal providers have appropriate incentives, which he describes, to keep costs down.

Lord Turner’s replacement as chair of the CCC is expected to be appointed by the end of March.

No one is policing EPCs

Further doubt on the ability of the Green Deal to meet its targets is cast by Mike Ockenden of the Property and Energy Professionals Association, writing in the current print edition of Energy and Environmental Management magazine.

He points out that there is only one local authority in the country, East Sussex, which is still monitoring the adequacy of Energy Performance Certificates (EPCs). These are the documents which will be used to estimate the energy efficiency of homes and buildings under the Green Deal.

A similar situation applies to Display Energy Certificates (DECs), which are meant to be displayed by public buildings over 1000 ft.². Many of these do not have a DEC, and yet not one has been prosecuted for this omission.

Trading Standards Offices are supposed to police the situation, and yet their departments have had their funding cut and enforcement activity has ceased completely, says Mr. Ockenden.

Without a monitoring system in place, and certification available to purchasers of homes to show how energy efficient they are, the nation’s energy consumers are being forced to consume more energy and have higher bills.

At the root of all of these troubles for the government’s energy policies can be found the spending cuts and the dispute between the Treasury and the Department for Energy and Climate Change over budget allocations.

This dispute looks set to continue in 2012, with the low carbon industry sectors looking anxiously for the reassurance they need that their future is secure.

 

Link: http://www.link2portal.com/chaos-envelops-coalitions-green-policies?utm_source=http%3a%2f%2ftenalps.communigatormail2.co.uk%2ftenalpslz%2f&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Energynewsletter_22.12.11&utm_term=Chaos+envelops+coalition%27s+green+policies%2c+MPs+reject+development+emphasis+in+planning+law+reform+…&utm_content=763621

 

Electricity prices to soar by 2021, survey predicts

Wholesale electricity prices will rise by at least 40 per cent over the next ten years, according to a survey of leading industry figures.

More than 90% of those questioned in the survey to mark the 10th anniversary of independent generation consolidator SmartestEnergy said they believed prices in 2021 will be higher in real terms than in 2011. Fewer than one in ten respondents said they expected wholesale prices to be the same or lower.

The Power Predictor 2021 survey was carried out among independent generators, energy buyers and brokers.

More than a third (35%) of those questioned said they believed wholesale prices will be between £70-£79.99/MWh. A further 29% predicted prices will hit at least £80/MWh, more than 60% higher than currently. Only 8.4% believed prices will be the same or lower than today.

The average price predicted was just over £70/MWh compared to the £49/MWh average seen over the past year – an increase of 43%.

“While it is impossible to forecast with any certainty what will happen over the next decade, it is clear from our survey that many in the industry are bracing themselves for significant increases,” said Robert Groves, Chief Executive of SmartestEnergy which is the UK’s leading purchaser and supplier of electricity from the independent sector.

“Wholesale prices have already more than doubled since SmartestEnergy was founded in 2001 and a continued upward trend presents major challenges as well as exciting opportunities for the energy entrepreneurs we work with.”

Environmental campaigner Jonathon Porritt, keynote speaker at a reception staged at the Swan at the Globe in London to mark SmartestEnergy’s anniversary, predicted the next decade would see “astonishing changes” in the way energy is generated, stored, distributed and consumed.

“Right now we are only in the foothills of what is going to happen in terms of innovation over the next decade. It won’t be a slow, incremental, unfolding process but a revolution,” said Porritt, the former director of Friends of the Earth who went on to co-found Forum for the Future, the UK’s leading sustainable development charity.

He made a number of predictions about how the energy sector will develop by 2021 including grid parity for solar PV being achieved within five years time and the rapid development of carbon capture and storage projects.

SMARTEST ENERGY

Green policies affecting UK industry

“The impacts of green policies are increasingly causing concern, both in terms of the likely scale of the impact on energy bills for major consumers and the continuing uncertainty about a number of mechanisms designed to support renewable investments,” comments Jayesh Parmar, Partner at Baring Partners. “There is a need for concerted focus and conclusion across environmental and industrial policy so we can set targets that are achievable without damaging Britain’s industry. We view the £250m support for energy intensive industries as recognition that there is growing realisation of this issue, although it is a relatively small sum when considered against the over 200TWh of energy taken by major consumers in the UK. We also await details of how this fund is expected to operate.”

http://www.theenergyevent.com/energy11/website/NewsDetailsPage.aspx?pressid=pressRe5&id=news

Renewable Heat Incentive Now Open For Application

Businesses and communities across Britain will be able to apply for a heat tariff payment, ushering in a new era of clean green heat technology, said Greg Barker. The world’s first Renewable Heat Incentive (RHI) is open to applicants from Monday 28 November, providing payments for heat generated from renewable technologies including biomass boilers, solar thermal equipment and heat pumps installed since 15 July 2009. Recipients will be paid up to 7.9p per kWh for biomass boilers, 8.5p per kWh for solar thermal and up to 4.5p per kWh for heat pumps.

Energy and Climate Change Minister Greg Barker said: “The RHI will usher in a new era in clean green heat technology. It’s a world first and has the potential to put the UK at the forefront of a vibrant new green technology sector. Renewable heat will be a big win for our economy – it will support thousands of green jobs, reduce our dependency on imported fossil fuels, reduce our carbon emissions and help us meet our renewable target.”

www.ofgem.gov.uk/rhi