Overview
Responding to today's
government energy announcements, John
Sauven, executive director of Greenpeace, said:
"If this plan becomes a
reality, it will create hundreds of thousands of green jobs and make Britain
a safer and more prosperous country. This will be good for the British economy
and, in the long-run, save householders money as we reduce our dependence on
foreign oil and gas.
"Ed Miliband appears to
be winning important battles in Whitehall. But it's crucial that these plans
now get full cross-party support and more backing from the Chancellor. The
renewable energy industry is too important to become a political football and
this strategy for green jobs deserves more than the current paltry sums being
offered by the Treasury."
Renewable
energy
Jim
Footner, senior energy campaigner for
Greenpeace, said:
"Britain's renewable industry needs to
form the cornerstone of our response to the climate crisis. So Ed Miliband
should be congratulated for standing up to giant utilities like Eon and EdF and
providing this boost to the British renewable
sector.
"Now we need cross-party consensus,
because this isn't just about hitting vital climate targets. It's also about
securing our energy supply, creating hundreds of thousands of jobs and
generating a much needed boost for the British
economy."
- The
UK has one of the best
renewable energy resources in Europe. Yet we
languish near the bottom of the European league table in terms of our ability to
exploit it. The UK currently
generates just 5% of our electricity from renewable sources, compared to 12% in
Germany, and 27% in
Spain.
- It is good
news that the Climate Change Secretary has chosen to implement powers introduced
last year to set the grid access regime and speed up access to the grid for
renewable energy capacity. Renewable energy must get priority access to the
grid.
- Ed Miliband
has also heeded that calls from across the energy debate to amend the remit of
the regulator OFGEM, which has for too long represented a barrier to the
development of renewables. OFGEM will now have to include decarbonisation in the
face of climate change within its primary duties - an important change.
- The UK's
status as a world leader in marine energy technologies is recognised with the
allocation of money for further research and development as well as the
identification of a ‘Low Carbon Economic Area' in the South West of England,
announced in the Low Carbon Industrial Strategy. The budget of just £60 million
fails to give this emerging industry the full support it deserves.
- On planning,
the strategy proposes measures enable renewable energy applications that
currently face years of delay in the planning system to gain quicker approval.
It is crucial for the successful implementation of the strategy that these
planning reforms (particularly for onshore wind farms) are taken seriously by
local authorities considering applications. It is therefore necessary that
strategy as a whole, but particularly the strategy on planning gains cross party
support.
Low Carbon
Industrial Strategy
Robin
Oakley, head of Greenpeace's climate and
energy team, said:
"If Miliband's vision was to become
a reality it would create hundreds of thousands of green jobs and make
Britain a safer and more prosperous
country. But that won't happen with the paltry budgets being offered by the
Treasury. It is scandalous that Miliband's low carbon ambitions, which have
potential to create whole new green industries, are met with a budget that is
only about half the amount the Chancellor allocated for bonuses for a bunch of
failed RBS bankers.
"For years the UK has lagged behind the rest of Europe on renewables. If Britain
is to catch up, and to benefit from the economic boost, job creation and
security of energy supply that our clean energy resources offer, it will require
the Chancellor to get behind Ed Miliband's efforts."
- The Carbon Trust estimates that up to a quarter of a million jobs
could be created in the UK through the delivery of the
efficiency and renewable energy targets.
- The focus on offshore wind, wave and tidal is right and the
recognition that regional development for new clean technologies, with research
and supply chain to support then, is sound.
- Britain leads
the world in the research on wave and tidal power with some of the pioneering
companies sited here. But the only wave project in operation in a commercial
environment - designed in the UK - is located in Portugal, because UK
support was lacking. Government should follow up this welcome expression of
support for marine renewables in the Southwest with more development clusters
for renewables and more money to help accelerate the commercialization of the
leading designs in these technologies here in the UK.
- More could be done to support the training and development of the
construction industry to help deliver a national refit improving British homes,
making them warmer, cheaper to run and low carbon. Energy efficiency measures
offer nationwide job creation opportunities and long term skilled jobs,
especially in the construction sector which has been badly effected by the
recession.
- According to reports in February 2009 bonuses at RBS reached £775
million http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2009/feb/18/rbs-bonuses
this highlights the paucity of the total budget of £405 for low carbon
industrial development and the spending announced today from that budget that
includes only £180 million of direct funding for renewable energy
development.
Carbon
Budgets
Robin
Oakley, head of Greenpeace's climate and
energy campaign, said:
"It's a step towards a much more
coherent climate policy that each government department will now have its own
carbon budget. And it's also good news that Miliband reaffirmed the government's
commitment to a 34% cut in emissions by 2020. However, the latest climate
science suggests he needs to be much more ambitious in this area and it's vital
that the reductions are all genuinely made here in the UK and not replaced with
offsets in other countries."
- Following
new legislation last year (the Climate Change Act), the Government will have to
operate within a ‘carbon budget' in the same way it has to operate in a
financial budget. If they go over the carbon budget, they'll have to do
something about it.
- There is a
new adviser to Government on what these carbon budgets should be - the Climate
Change Committee (CCC).
- The
UK has to reduce carbon dioxide
emissions by 80% by 2050.
- The CCC
recommended, and the government agreed, to reduce UK
greenhouse gas emissions by 34% by 2020. Although if there is a decent agreement
in Copenhagen later this year, this will be increased to around a 42% cut, which
is more in line with what we need to avoid dangerous climate
change.
Transport
Anita
Goldsmith, head of Greenpeace's transport
campaign, said:
"After Ed Miliband made
such positive statements on renewable energy today, it is a shame to see that
the Department for Transport has let the side down yet again.
"It is hard to see how
such weak policies will deliver the kinds of emissions cuts we need, and any
real progress will be wiped out by the department's ongoing obsession with
unrestrained aviation growth."
"It is important not to
let the DfT fool anyone into believing that they are driving forward increased
vehicle efficiency when in fact they lobbied against this in the EU, leading to
weaker targets and slower progress.
"Overall this package
tinkers at the edges, whilst letting the real problems embedded within road and
air transport go unchallenged. We're hoping that Adonis will soon get his
department under control and align it with the wider priorities of the
government."
- If plans to
expand Heathrow go ahead, it will become the biggest single source of carbon
dioxide in the UK and will wreck the Government's
chances of meeting climate change targets.
- The
Government's own figures show that aviation currently accounts for 13% of Britain's total climate change impact
and threatens to undermine all other efforts to cut emissions in other
sectors.
- The global
warming impact of emissions from aviation are predicted to double from 2006 to
2030.
- By 2050, on
this trajectory, the aviation sector alone could use up the UK's entire carbon budget, making it almost
impossible for the UK to meet its targets and damaging
other parts of the economy forced to make up the difference.
- Small
increases in the efficiency of planes will be overwhelmed by an unrestrained
growth in flights and including aviation in the ETS will not solve the
problem.
- According to a report
from Ernst and Young, even in the
toughest Emissions Trading Scheme scenario, emissions from the aviation sector
would grow by 83% by 2020.
T&E background briefing (2007)
Including Aviation in the EU's Emissions
Trading Scheme (EU ETS) page 6.
- Electrifying
our road transport network could be a vital step in the fight against climate
change. But this must be done alongside radical improvements in vehicle
efficiency standards and be accompanied by investment in additional renewable
sources of energy generation.
- The DfT
lobbied on the recently agreed EU regulations to reduce emissions from new cars
to an of average 130gCO2/km
by 2012. The proposed target was originally for 120gCO2/km. There are already
cars on the market that can deliver 99gCO2/km or less, such as the VW Polo Blue
Motion, as well as petrol-hybrid vehicles that are even lower.
- The
electrification of rail and move towards low emissions buses are good
initiatives but remain a small part of the overall transport problem. According
to the DfT's own figures, rail accounts for 1.7% of total UK
domestic transport emissions with buses accounting for 2.3%. http://www.dft.gov.uk/pgr/statistics/datatablespublications/energyenvironment/climatechangefactsheets.pdf
- Road
transport and aviation remain the biggest problems, with road transport
accounting for 92.3% of domestic transport emissions.
- The focus on greener driving techniques also puts the onus on
individuals rather than the delivery of the big infrastructure changes that
urgently need to take place in the transport sector. Essentially, this is a
transparent attempt to pass the buck on to drivers - the very opposite of the
sort of leadership we need.
Biofuels
Reacting to new figures on the
source of the UK's biofuels, Greenpeace chief
scientist Dr. Doug Parr
said:
"It is a scandal that 27 million
litres of Indonesian palm
oil were pumped into our tanks last year, of which not a single drop met the
Government's own environmental standard. Companies like Tesco are selling their
customers biofuel from unknown sources which could be wrecking the climate and
destroying rainforests. It's time for Lord Adonis to abandon
this misguided policy and start again".
Key findings of the Renewable fuel
agency fourth quarter report, 2008/9:http://www.renewablefuelsagency.org/_db/_documents/RFA_quarterly_report_Apr_2008_Apr_2009.pdf.
- A tenth of
the UK's biofuel - 123 million litres -
was produced from palm oil over the past year.
- 27 million litres of Indonesian palm oil were pumped into our tanks
this year, of which not a single drop met the Government's own environmental
standard (the RTFO meta standard). This is a scandal, because palm oil is one of
the main causes of rainforest destruction and its production is actually
speeding up climate change. A tenth of all the biofuel we used was palm oil
- Several companies (Chevron, Murco, and Topaz) have not reported any
biofuels meeting the qualifying environmental standard, and Esso have reported
less than 2% of their biofuels meeting a qualifying environmental standard.
- Less than a quarter of the biofuel (24%) we're using has met the
Government's own sustainability standard.
ENDS