Streamlining and improving the Green Deal

The Green Deal, which is designed to work alongside the Energy Company Obligation to make Britain’s homes more energy efficient, will be streamlined and improved to boost take up of energy efficiency measures.

The changes are designed to make the Green Deal more straightforward and less time-consuming for families who want to improve their homes and benefit from lower bills in future

These proposed changes are part of the government’s action to help people with their energy bills, announced by the Department of Energy and Climate Change on 2 December 2013.

The details of the proposed changes are available on GOV.UK

Britain’s largest coal-fired power station is set to become one of Europe’s biggest renewable electricity generators today, with the potential for new future generation on the site to be based on truly clean coal.

Energy and Climate Change Secretary Edward Davey opened the Drax coal-to-biomass conversion plant, and announced the Government was awarding funding to further the White Rose CCS project, also based at the site.

At Drax, the £700 million planned conversion project will burn wood pellets rather than coal. Drax calculate that this will reduce carbon emissions by 80 per cent compared to coal. The facilities opened today will provide enough low carbon power to the equivalent of around 1 million homes, and helps to safeguard 1,200 jobs and many more in the supply chain and in local communities.

The multi-million pound FEED study funding will support the White Rose project, which is designing a c.£2 billion state-of-the-art coal power plant with full CCS that will be able to provide clean electricity to more than 630,000 homes. It also includes the planned development of a CO2 transport and storage network – the Yorkshire Humber CCS Trunkline – which would have capacity for additional CCS projects in the area.

This innovative project has the potential to create up to 2,000 jobs and safely capture 90% of the plant’s emissions.

Together, the two projects could support 3,200 jobs in Yorkshire and the Humber, and provide carbon transport infrastructure to help build a clean energy industry in the region.

Statement by Edward Davey on publishing the Contract for Difference (CfD) strike prices for renewable technologies.

I wish to inform the House that today the Government is publishing the Contract for Difference (CfD) strike prices for renewable technologies, alongside an update to the key CfD contract terms. This information is being published ahead of schedule in order to provide further certainty to industry and investors.

Contracts for Difference are one of the main mechanisms created as part of the Electricity Market Reform (EMR) programme. EMR is the central component of the Energy Bill, currently being considered by Parliament, which will address the need to attract unprecedented levels of investment in the UK electricity sector over the coming decades to replace our ageing energy infrastructure with a diverse, low-carbon energy mix.

CfDs will stimulate investment in all forms of low-carbon electricity generation by providing efficient, long-term support. The CfD reduces the risks faced by low-carbon generators, by paying a variable top-up between the market price and a fixed price level, known as the ‘strike price’. As well as reducing the exposure to volatile and rising fossil fuel prices, the CfD protects consumers by ensuring that generators pay back when the price of electricity goes above the strike price.

The strike prices and updated contract terms being published today have been set to meet the Government’s objectives on renewable energy, decarbonisation, security of supply and minimising cost to consumers, and are informed by the feedback and evidence received through the Delivery Plan consultation, conducted during the summer of 2013. The consultation included draft strike prices for renewable technologies, and was followed in August by the publication of further detail on CfD contract terms.

The strike prices published today provide:

  • A basis for renewable electricity to achieve at least 30 per cent of generation by 2020, in line with the EU renewables target;
  • A strong foundation for offshore wind. DECC modelling suggests that 10GW is achievable (in line with the 8-16GW range in the draft Delivery Plan). This is not a target and actual deployment will depend on technology costs;
  • Good value for money for consumers by ensuring that the overall level of support remains within the LCF and that where cost savings can be made they are reflected in revised strike prices; and
  • Continued ambitions for other technologies that are expected to be in line with the draft Delivery Plan and the Renewables Roadmap

The pipeline of projects under development in the UK in established technologies is strong enough to permit earlier introduction of competition. The European Commission is expected to publish new Environmental and Energy Aid guidelines for consultation soon.

Given the approach set out in the recent DG Energy guidance, it is expected that the new state aid guidelines will require the UK to move to competition for more established technologies. The Government will confirm its approach and details of how this will operate through the Delivery Plan and engagement with stakeholders early in 2014.

The CfD contract terms have also been updated to take into account feedback received from a wide range of stakeholders following publication of detail on the terms, along with a draft CfD contract, in August 2013. The Government has now made a number of changes to further support the ability of developers to bring forward investment at lower cost to consumers. In particular the updated terms provide flexibility to reduce capacity, protection against unexpected events and protection against changing circumstances.

The Government’s full response to the consultation on the draft Delivery Plan, is intended be published later this month alongside the EMR Delivery Plan. The Delivery Plan will include further detail on the strike prices. The documents will also be accompanied by a detailed explanation of the Government’s final policy positions on the CfD contract terms.

Government also announced today that sixteen projects have reached the next stage of Final Investment Decision Enabling for Renewables process to secure an early form of Contracts for Difference. The final selection of projects will take place in spring 2014.

The documents, Investing in renewable technologies – CfD contract terms and strike prices and Final Investment Decision for Renewables: Update 3: Contract Award Process, are available on the Government website.

As part of the Energy Bills announcements earlier this week, the government outlined proposed changes to ECO, and announced that £540 million will be made available over the next three years to boost energy efficiency. £450 million of the £540 million will be aimed at households and private landlords.

Alongside this, the Green Deal is also being improved to make it more attractive for consumers and to remove unnecessary cost for companies.

 

Visit the DECC blog for the full story

Additional investments of around £40 billion are expected in renewable electricity generation projects up to 2020, following updated contract terms and strike prices published today and wider reforms to the electricity market.

Sixteen renewable generation projects also reached the next stage of Final Investment Decision Enabling for Renewables (FIDeR) process today, which could be supported either through investment contracts or the enduring Contracts for Difference (CfD) regime.

Full details are available on GOV.UK and in Edward Davey’s Statement to Parliament

The government response document ‘Non-Domestic Renewable Heat Incentive: Improving support, increasing uptake’ has today been published, setting out a range of improvements and increased support under the non-domestic Renewable Heat Incentive (RHI).

This responds to the consultations:

  • Expanding the non-domestic scheme
  • Air to Water Heat Pumps and Energy from Waste
  • Non Domestic Scheme Early Tariff Review

It also addresses the outcome of four calls for evidence related to bio-propane, large biomass, ground source heat pumps and landfill gas.

Also published today are further details of the domestic RHI, related to budget management policy, phasing of legacy applications and treatment of some types of subsidy, as well as confirming the tariff for solar thermal at 19.2p/kWh, as per our commitment when publishing the domestic RHI policy in July 2013.

 

Consultations

 

Further information