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Energy Policy – innovation and governance. University of Cardiff May 2012 Catherine.mitchell@exeter.ac.uk. Overview. What’s the point of EP? UK Carbon Budgets 80% cut by 2050 on 1990 levels Very different energy system Technologies Infrastructure Practices – business and individuals
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Energy Policy – innovation and governance University of Cardiff May 2012 Catherine.mitchell@exeter.ac.uk
Overview • What’s the point of EP? • UK Carbon Budgets • 80% cut by 2050 on 1990 levels • Very different energy system • Technologies • Infrastructure • Practices – business and individuals • Needs lots of change • British energy system has not changed underlying system very much • Some other countries seem to be doing better • Governance – basically meaning ‘the rules of the game’ makes a difference to innovation
Innovation • Complex to define • Used here as change which is wanted • Ie sustainable innovation • Not just about technologies but also practices
Energy Policy Goals and Roles • What goals do we have for our society? • EP should be helping to enable that policy • Within this energy policy, what roles for • the state? • the market? • individuals/customers? • business? • Answers to these questions lead to the sort of EP to be followed
4th Carbon Budget UK Committee on Climate Change (CCC, 2010)
Projected UK electricity use, CCC 2010 – about 350 TWh more low carbon
Where is this low carbon coming from? Nuclear and RE [CCC, 2010]
CCC, 2010(as a comparison Nuclear provided 56.5 TWh or about 16% in 2010)
Energy Policy in the UK • Energy Policy in the UK focussed on enabling nuclear power • Increasingly untenable • Major changes to electricity market to eliminate risk for nuclear power investors • Contract for Difference FITs – a strike price linked to the electricity price • For nuclear, CCS and renewable energy • Carbon price floor - £70 t / C by 2030 • An emission performance standard • A capacity payment (of some description) • More of the same: centralised, supply, far from demand centres • Customers will pay, whatever the tab • Narrow thinking about what energy policy is for • To the extent good for nuclear – probably no worse for RE except not clear if there will be an obligation
Governance in Britain • Differs between England and Wales (E&W), Scotland and N.Ireland • Energy Policy is not a devolved area but RE and Energy Efficiency is • From a big picture perspective • Policies have changed • Increasing RE, EE etc • But balance of underlying incentives – ie who/what makes money (costs versus revenue) from the whole picture of energy has had limited change • Not inclusive but exclusive • Difficult for new entrants • Top down • Incumbants seen as executors of EP • Strong underlying philosophy that markets / quasi markets are preferable to regulation • Frameworks ok; strategic planning a step too far • Limited change in technologies, infrastructure, industry structure, practices • Some new technology companies • 99% of supply still in hands of big 6 • Still supply orientated • Practices still largely the same • 7% of electricity now from renewables, about 3% in 1990
PV for a while was different • FIT for under 5 MW • In just over a year, 120,000 generators and 150,000 sites • Payments high • Debacle over reduction in payments • PV really is a game changing technology
Governance in Germany • Major manufacturing country of Europe • Industrial policy and economic well being important • Strategic frameworks are embedded and important to society • History of federal, regional and municipal links • Pragmatic about how outcomes are achieved • Markets versus regulation • View that risk needs to be reduced to increase investment • Made choice on nuclear • Incentives (rules of game) about how companies / people make money have changed • Technologies • Practices • Increasingly infrastructure • Inclusive, holistic policies • Incumbents still in charge of supply to customers (ie Big 4) but unable to influence EP direction • RE, EE, transport, infrastructure • Local versus federal • Behaviour
Other examples • California and demand reduction • Public Utilities based on rate of return • Uses about 50% less electricity than the average in US and about 40% less petrol • Upper Austria • Domestic energy has reduced by about 20% in last 10 years • Denmark • Integrated framework for demand reduction on track to reduce total energy use by 25% by 2050
Governance essential not just for unlocking PV potential • Infrastructure • Regulation – changing the rules of the game • inclusivity • Peak prices drop • Missing money • Flexibility and back up • Eg interconnectors • Hydro belt as balancers • Denmark versus British policy • Lifestyles and practices