In its report on the Government’s
draft Energy Bill in July this year, 2012, the Parliamentary Information Office
highlighted the divisions on future energy policy that existed between the
Government coalition partners. Yesterday, 22nd November 2012, having reached
agreement the Government published details of its long-awaited Energy Bill.
Details of the bill were
announced late last night although the bill itself will not be published until next
week.
The Energy and Climate Change
Secretary, the Rt Hon Ed Davey MP said:
“This is a durable agreement
across the Coalition against which companies can invest and support jobs and
our economic recovery.
“The decisions we’ve reached are
true to the Coalition Agreement, they mean we can introduce the Energy Bill
next week and have essential electricity market reforms up and running by 2014 as
planned.
“They will allow us to meet our
legally binding carbon reduction and renewable energy obligations and will
bring on the investment required to keep the lights on and bills affordable for
consumers.”
With a fifth of the UK’s
electricity generating capacity due to close this decade, reforms are needed to
provide certainty to investors to bring forward £110 billion investment in new infrastructure
to keep the lights on and continue the shift to a diverse, low carbon economy
as cheaply as possible. It will support as many as 250,000 jobs in the energy
sector.
Mr Davey announced a package of
decisions around the Energy Bill:
o
The creation of a
Government-owned company to act as a single counterparty to give investors
confidence to enter into new long term Contracts for Difference for low carbon electricity
projects.
o
Powers to introduce a capacity
market, allowing for capacity auctions from 2014 for delivery of capacity in
the winter of 2018/19, if needed, to help ensure the lights stay on even at
times of peak demand. The Government is also seeking to provide certainty to gas
investors and a Gas Generation Strategy will be published alongside the
Chancellor’s Autumn Statement.
o
An amendment during passage of
the Bill to take powers to set a decarbonisation target range for 2030 in
secondary legislation. A decision to exercise this power will be taken once the
Climate Change Committee has provided advice in 2016 on the 5th Carbon Budget
which covers the corresponding period. In the meantime, the Government will
issue guidance to National Grid setting out an indicative range of
decarbonisation scenarios for the power sector in 2030 consistent with the
least cost approach to the UK’s 2050 carbon target and reflecting both the
existing fourth carbon budget and a scenario in which it is reviewed up, as
outlined when the budget was set.
The amount of market support to
be available for low carbon electricity investment (under the Levy Control
Framework) up to 2020 has also been agreed. This will be set at £7.6 billion
(real 2012 prices) in 2020, which corresponds to around or £9.8 billion
(nominal 2020 prices). This will help diversify our energy mix to avoid
excessive gas import dependency by increasing the amount of electricity coming
from renewables from 11% today to around 30% by 2020, as well as supporting new
nuclear power and carbon capture and storage commercialisation. It is broadly
consistent with the Committee on Climate Change’s recommendation. It will
provide certainty to investors in all generation technologies and provide
protection to consumers.
The chairman of the Commons
Energy Select Committee, Tim Yeo MP, however said that it was worrying that the
government had not introduced an emissions goal for 2030:
"There will be concern that
the government hasn't accepted the full implications - which are already clear
- of the extent to which electricity generation needs to be decarbonised by
2030".
The Bill includes provisions on:
Electricity Market Reform
Electricity Market Reform (EMR)
will bring about the biggest transformation of the UK’s electricity sector
since privatisation. The reforms introduce two key mechanisms: Contracts for Difference
and the powers to implement a Capacity Market that will help to attract the
£110 billion of private sector investment we need to replace ageing energy
infrastructure with a more diverse and low-carbon energy mix.
Contracts for Difference (CfDs)
A new mechanism that will be
introduced via the Energy Bill. CfDs are long term contracts that provide
stable revenues for investors in low carbon energy projects at a fixed level
known as a strike price. These contracts will help developers secure the large
upfront amounts of capital investment required for low carbon infrastructure
such as nuclear powers stations, offshore wind farms or carbon capture and
storage plants. By providing a fixed price they will help lower the cost of
capital. They will protect consumers from high bills by clawing back money from
generators if the market price of electricity rises above the strike price.
Counterparty
Government will establish a new
body to act as a single counterparty to the CfDs with eligible generators. The
counterparty will have levy-raising powers to enable it to raise funds from suppliers
to meet its costs, including payments to generators. This was a key
recommendation of the Energy and Climate Change Select Committee.
Capacity Market
A Capacity Market will provide an
insurance policy for Government against future supply shortages, helping to
ensure that consumers continue to receive reliable electricity supplies at an
affordable cost. There is an increased risk to security of electricity supplies
towards the end of the decade as a fifth of our existing capacity is set to close
and more intermittent (wind) and inflexible (nuclear) generation will be built
over time to replace it. Ofgem and National Grid will forecast where there
could be shortages in supply and, if needed, auction for capacity in advance to
ensure we have enough energy backup to meet consumer demand.
Decarbonisation Target
The Government is committed to
meeting the legally binding decarbonisation targets as set out in the Climate
Change Act 2008, and economy-wide carbon budgets. The Government will take a power
in the forthcoming Energy Bill to set a decarbonisation range in secondary
legislation.
The power will provide for
flexibility in the setting or reviewing of the range by consideration of wider
economic factors. The decision on whether to set a range for carbon emissions
in 2030 will be taken when the Committee on Climate Change has provided advice
in 2016 on the 5th Carbon Budget which will cover the corresponding period
(2028 – 2033), and once the Government has set that budget.
Levy Control Framework
The Levy Control Framework (LCF)
forms part of the Government’s public spending framework, which the Treasury
has responsibility for. Its purpose is to make sure that DECC achieves its fuel
poverty, energy and climate change goals in a way that is consistent with
economic recovery and minimising the impact on consumer bills. The LCF budget
is currently £2.35 billion for low carbon electricity in 2012/13. Under the
agreement announced today low carbon electricity spending under the LCF will
rise to £7.6bn in real terms in 2020/21. The final limit will be set in nominal
terms on revised ONS and OBR numbers in the New Year. On current figures this
would equate to £9.8bn in 2020/21. The spending settlement announced today does
not cover the ECO or Warm Homes Discount, which have separate spending limits
to 2015.
The Parliamentary Information
Office of the Parliamentary Yearbook will continue to report on the progress of
the bill as we go through the months ahead.
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