Five
offshore windfarms and three biomass projects will provide millions of homes
with clean power
theguardian.com,
Adam Vaughan, Wednesday 23 April 2014
. Ed Davey: Britain’s renewable energy investment boom is a story rarely told
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Burbo Bank windfarm is one of the projects given backing under the new deal Photograph: PAUL ELLIS/AFP/Getty Images |
The UK
government has agreed deals to financially support eight major new renewable
energy projects that will power millions of homes.
Five of the
schemes are offshore windfarms, which the Conservative party plans to back in its general election manifesto over cheaper but more controversial onshore wind
power.
The
projects will create 8,500 jobs and add 4.5GW of electricity capacity to the
national grid, around 4% of the UK's generating capacity, or enough to power
more than 3 million homes. The projects were worth up to £12bn in private
sector investment, the government said.
The
combined projects are expected to add 2% to an average household electricity
bill by 2020, or £11 per household, but energy and climate secretary, Ed Davey,
said the government's "whole package" on energy reforms would
ultimately lower consumer energy bills.
Davey said:
“These contracts for major renewable electricity projects mark a new stage in
Britain’s green energy investment boom. By themselves they will bring green
jobs and growth across the UK, but they are a significant part of our efforts
to give Britain cleaner and more secure energy."
“These are
the first investments from our reforms to build the world’s first low carbon
electricity market – reforms which will see competition and markets attract
tens of billions of pounds of vital energy investment whilst reducing the costs
of clean energy to consumers."
The
agreements are part of a transition to a new subsidy regime, with the old one
being phased out in 2017. The deals agreed today are known as investment
contracts and are an early form of the new "contracts for
difference", which offer low-carbon generators a guaranteed price for
their electricity. A similar contract for difference was agreed last year for the first nuclear power plant in the UK in decades, at Hinkley point in
Somerset.
Industry
welcomed the deals but said the UK needed more onshore windfarms, which the Tories are considering capping.
Maf Smith,
deputy chief executive of trade body RenewableUK, said: "We’re pleased to
see this vote in confidence for these five offshore wind projects, which will
make an important contribution to keeping the lights on, and create much-needed
growth in coastal areas."
"However,
we need far more onshore and offshore wind projects over the next decade if
we’re not to find our energy security threatened, and the UK further exposed to
price shocks from imported fossil fuels, so it’s important that the contracts
for difference regime works for all renewable energy projects, not just those
that have secured early contracts."
The
offshore wind projects include Dong Energy's 250MW Burbo Bank extension in
Liverpool Bay, Statoil/Statkraft's 400MW Dudgeon off the coast of Norfolk, a
consortium-backed 1.2GW windfarm off the coast of Yorkshire, Dong Energy's
660MW extension off the coast of Cumbria. 1.7m, and the 664MW Beatrice windfarm
in the Outer Moray Firth in Scotland.
Three
biomass projects have also been given the green light, including a conversion
of one part of Britain's biggest coal power plant, Drax in North Yorkshire,
plus Lynemouth Power Station in Northumberland and MGT's Teesside plan at
Middlesborough.
A contract
for a second unit at Drax was turned down, however, leading its owner on
Wednesday to announce legal proceedings against the government.
Dorothy
Thompson, chief executive of Drax, said: "Whilst we are pleased to have
been offered an investment contract for our third unit conversion, we are
disappointed by today’s decision on the ineligibility of our second unit.
Sustainable biomass provides a very reliable, flexible and cost effective
renewable power source for the UK consumer."
Drax's AGM
in London was met by anti-biomass protesters on Wednesday, with three
campaigners being removed from the meeting after unfurling a banner.
Oliver
Munnion, a campaigner at the group Biofuelwatch, said: “Drax’s conversion
actually allows it to burn more coal long into the future. Even after the
conversion they’ll be burning some 3.7 million tonnes of coal every year from
opencast mines in the UK and imported from places like Colombia, where communities
have been forced off their land for expanding mines. Biomass isn't about
renewable energy, it's about keeping old, polluting power stations running,
when they should be closing down.”
Davey took
a shot at the previous Labour government's record on renewable energy, saying:
"Record levels of energy investment are at the forefront of the
government’s infrastructure programme and are filling the massive gap we
inherited. It’s practical reforms like these that will keep the lights on and
tackle climate change, by giving investors more certainty.”
He also
said the contracts announced today were part of the government's package of
measures that would lead to lower household energy bills.
Davey told
the Today programme: "You've got, for example, energy efficiency, product
standards, which are all reducing the amounts of energy that people need and
therefore cutting their bills. If you see something in isolation, yes, you can
say 'well, that's putting up costs a bit' but actually, if you take the whole package,
not only are we reducing people's bills overall but we're getting the secure,
clean energy that we need to make sure our consumers and our businesses get the
energy they need."
Ann
Robinson, director of consumer policy at comparison website uSwitch.com, said:
“While delivering secure, clean energy is an important part of the government's
energy market reforms, it is imperative that affordability and keeping
household costs to a minimum remain at the heart of its policy. Although 2%
over the next six years may not sound like a significant increase, with the
average household energy bill now at an eye-watering £1,265 a year many
consumers will be left feeling concerned by this announcement."
Green
groups welcomed the agreements but called on the government to do more on
renewable energy and offer greater clarity to the industry.
Alasdair
Cameron, energy campaigner at Friends of the Earth, said: "The government
must prioritise cutting energy waste and further increasing renewable power,
and abandon its reckless pursuit of fracking – which is dirty, unpopular and
will not deliver for years."
Jimmy
Aldridge, energy campaigner at Greenpeace, welcomed the commitment but said:
"If ministers are serious about shaking off our chronic addiction to
volatile, dangerous fossil fuels, they should drop their good cop, bad cop
routine on clean energy and get on with the job of making Britain's energy
cleaner and safer."
The
government also said on Wednesday that more than £30bn had been invested in
renewable electricity generation since 2010, creating thousands of jobs. Last
week, the third part in a trilogy of reports from the UN's Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate Change concluded that a switch from fossil fuels to renewable energy sources would not "cost the world" financially.
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