Energy

Government must make urgent decisions about energy, but as few as possible

July 19, 2012

Europe

July 19, 2012

Europe

The public inquiry into whether to build a nuclear reactor at Sizewell B took four years. It received evidence from 195 witnesses. Published in 1987, the final report that gave the go ahead was 3,000 pages long. It was the longest-running and most expensive public inquiry in British history.

Despite its apparent comprehensiveness, many of the assumptions that underpinned its decision -- future costs of electricity, emergence of gas generation, cost of building the reactor -- turned out to be wrong. The exercise showed that the best efforts of some of the wisest minds in the industry were not able to predict the best course for energy policy.

The UK government has, in recent years, started to make many more decisions in the energy market. Some are necessary; the government must intervene to tackle the imperative of climate change. Some are not; should government really be setting prices for new gas generation, as the recent Energy Bill implies?

Alongside the risk of making the wrong decision, government intervention also creates the risk that decisions are simply not made. That is the predicament in which the UK government currently finds itself. The delay in announcing the level of subsidy for onshore wind is just the latest example.

David Kennedy is therefore right to call for greater certainty in energy policy. Government has created the situation where it has to make decisions. It now needs to make them, however politically uncomfortable. You can model and consult and prod and poke but, at the end of the day, someone in Government, or empowered by government,  is going to have to sit down and pick some prices.

This is far from ideal. No matter how brilliant that person is, they will get the answer wrong. New technological breakthroughs, changing fossil fuel and carbon prices, shifts in demand will all blow holes in assumptions.

A much more desirable approach would be a clear carbon pricing regime and allowing technologies to compete freely against each other without government interference. If we want to achieve a 50gCO2/kWh electricity system by 2030, as the Committee on Climate Change advocates, we should set that level of ambition in negotiations over the Emissions Trading Scheme, not the new Energy Bill. Because the ETS limits the EU's total carbon emissions, if we simply decarbonise our electricity system and the cap remains in place, Poland will keep burning coal and we will pay for it. Improving the ETS is not easy, of course, but it is imperative.

Government should then use simple mechanisms, perhaps through the Energy Bill, to support the development of currently uncompetitive low carbon technologies (whether that includes nuclear is up for debate). New technologies such as renewables and CCS are going to require considerable subsidy. We should be honest about that. But the focus should be on getting the costs down so that the technologies can compete in a carbon-priced market, not simply meeting the arbitrary 2020 target for renewable energy.

David Kennedy also argues that we should avoid investing in the 'wrong technologies which we then have to scrap'. However, which are the 'wrong technologies'? The CCC has argued against a new 'dash for gas'. However, our analysis found that even if you allowed new gas generation to be built and closed it early rather than ploughing ahead with the most expensive low carbon technology -- currently offshore wind -- you could save significant sums and still meet carbon targets.

The Government's moves to grab decision-making has created the unedifying situation where it is likely the Prime Minister, because of Coalition infighting, is going to have to decide the level  of support for onshore wind. And is it right that Secretary of State for Energy is given the power to promise EDF a guaranteed electricity price, as suggested in the new Energy Bill?

Where officials have to make decisions in the energy market, they should do so openly and as swiftly as possible. But every effort should be made to make sure they make as few as possible.

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