(Kilmarnock and Loudoun)
(SNP)
I beg to move,
That leave be given to bring in a Bill to require the Government
and Ofgem to conduct and act on a review of the electricity
transmission grid and associated charges, to include
consideration of abolishing charge differentials based on
geographic location, incentivising renewable energy generation to
maximise energy output, and minimising the passing on of charge
fluctuation risk to consumers in the form of higher prices; and
for connected purposes.
The driver behind this Bill is that Scotland currently has the
highest grid charges in Europe. The Tory Government shrug their
shoulders and say, “It’s nothing to do with us—it’s a matter for
Ofgem.” However, they are the ones who set the rules for Ofgem to
implement. What is the point of the Government bragging about a
net zero target for 2050 and a plan to decarbonise the
electricity grid by 2035 when they do not seem capable of seeing
the bigger picture? While they probably do not care about
Scotland having the highest grid charges—it fits their perception
that Scotland is remote, so additional cost makes sense, and that
anyway it is just us Scots whingeing again—the reality is that
continuing as is jeopardises their own net zero plans as well as
Scotland’s own targets. It makes a mockery of their levelling up
agenda—which is, in reality, just about targeting the red wall
seats of north England and the midlands. That agenda was
confirmed last week by the disgraceful decision to class the
Scottish carbon capture and storage cluster as a reserve.
The current grid charges system was introduced in 1992 following
privatisation of the electricity market. Back then, it was based
on the concept that electricity is generated from coal, gas, oil
or large nuclear stations. With this embedded concept, the
charging system is now still geared at incentivising power
generation sites close to the centres of population—or, more
accurately, the closer to London the better. It is utterly absurd
that the UK Government have taken the welcome step to phase out
coal-fired electricity generation but are retaining a grid
charges system that is based on where to build coal-fired power
stations. It is completely bonkers. The obvious strategy would be
to consider what a future grid will look like, where are the best
locations for the generation of clean renewable energy and what
grid upgrades will be required to facilitate that, and then
analyse the long-term costs of the grid upgrades and devise a
fair system of charging to facilitate that. That is exactly what
this Bill seeks to do.
Let us be clear: having the highest geographical charges in
Europe creates an uneven playing field when looking for
investment. The majority of the countries in Europe do not have
locational charges. The ones that do charge way less than is
imposed in Scotland. If a developer built a grid-connected
turbine in each of these countries—Finland, Denmark, Sweden,
Norway, Austria, France, Slovakia, Romania and Belgium—the
combined locational charges for those nine turbines across nine
countries would be less than the charge imposed on a single
turbine in the north of Scotland. That illustrates the investor
competition for Scotland, let alone the fact that so many other
countries, such as the Netherlands and Germany, do not impose
geographical charges. Worse, the UK Government are building
interconnectors that allow electricity imports that are exempt
from these grid charges. I am supportive of an interconnected
energy market, but the system incentivises international
investors to invest in other countries.
Scotland has 25% of Europe’s offshore wind potential, so future
planning should be about how to maximise that, especially when
the UK Government have a 40 GW target for offshore wind by 2030,
which is reliant on 10 GW coming from Scotland. Scotland also has
fantastic potential with floating offshore wind, especially with
the Hywind project already operational. Forward thinking should
be about maximising opportunities for these leading
technologies.
It is not just us in the Scottish National party saying that
change is required; the wider industry is saying it too.
ScottishPower, SSE, Vattenfall, RWE, Red Rock Power, RenewableUK
and Scottish Renewables have all called for changes to the grid
charging regime. Indeed, a survey by SSE showed that 93% of
industry stakeholders support reform of the current transmission
charging regime. Some 84% of respondents stated that the network
charging system acts as a barrier to the delivery of their
renewable projects in Scotland. What does it take for the UK
Government to sit up and listen?
What could be more iniquitous than suffering the highest grid
charges in Europe? Well, if we look within the UK energy market,
Scotland is further disadvantaged, especially in comparison to
southern England. Connections to the south of England result in
generators being paid to connect to the grid. It is a physical
impossibility to have a negative cost of managing one area of the
transmission system, so this therefore appears to be another
method of levelling down, not up. The Beatrice array off the
coast of Moray pays a unit electricity price of £4.50 to connect
to the grid. A comparator in southern England is paid £1.50 per
unit of energy. Why is the leader of the Scottish Tories not
speaking up about that? Another example in numbers is that a 1 GW
site off the north Scottish coast will pay £38 million a year to
connect to the grid, yet the same sized offshore windfarm
connecting to southern England will get paid £7 million a year.
That is a £45 million a year differential between the Scottish
and English sides. Over 20 years, that is nearly a £l billion
difference.
Scottish offshore windfarms are now 20% more expensive than those
in English waters. When the lowest price is winner takes all in
the contracts for difference auctions, that becomes a major issue
and puts investment in offshore renewable energy in Scotland at
risk. It means less direct jobs and less supply chain work, and
it potentially hampers a just transition for the oil and gas
industry.
The effects of the charging burden on Scottish projects can
already be seen. In the 2015 auction round, Scottish projects
accounted for almost 40% of the offshore wind contract awards. By
the 2019 round, it was down to less than 10%. Surely that is not
an intended consequence. Worse, if nothing is done, in the next
few years, Scottish grid charges will be charged at a rate
equivalent to 50% of the strike rate producers achieved for
selling their energy, making it impossible to compete with those
bidding in English waters. It is madness to have production
prices falling and some of the best sites in Europe, but a grid
charging regime blocking the route to market. By default, it
means Scottish projects need to have 20% greater efficiency or
outputs compared with southern England sites to be able to
compete. However, higher output equals higher charges, so the
cycle continues.
Another point about the current charging system is price
volatility. While the actual cost of maintaining and operating
the grid remains stable, the charging prices vary by up to 700%,
demonstrating that the system is not fit for purpose. As
companies cannot predict these fluctuations, it is a risk factor
they have to add to their project costs. By the end of this
decade, that will be costing consumers an estimated £400 million
a year in wasted costs.
In terms of the best use of billpayers’ money when considering
the future energy mix, we should not be spending billions of
pounds on new nuclear. At £23 billion, Hinkley Point C is the
most expensive power station in the world. Despite complete
market failure in the nuclear sector, the UK Government still
want to spend £20 billion- plus on Sizewell. Worse, these nuclear
sites will get paid under the current regime to connect to the
grid—more hidden subsidies for nuclear. Instead, investment
should be committed to pumped storage hydro such as SSE’s Coire
Glas and the Cruachan dam extension being planned by Drax. That
creates renewable energy ready to be dispatched when required and
at a fraction of the cost of nuclear. An Imperial College report
suggests the system could save £700 million a year.
Wave and tidal is also at the stage of being able to scale up.
All that is needed for the next stage of scaling up is some
ringfenced money in the forthcoming contracts for difference
auction. Money has been ringfenced for floating wind, so why not
wave and tidal? I urge the Minister to act urgently, before it is
too late. We cannot have another Westminster decision that
adversely impacts Scotland. The Orbital O2 tidal generator
situated off the coast of Orkney is already connected to the grid
and working. It has 80% UK content, and it was the first vessel
launched from Dundee in 40 years. Surely the UK Government want
to maximise this technology?
It is clear that change is required, with a rounded energy policy
that maps out a route to net zero, a policy that incentivises
renewable energy production where it is best suited, an end to
Scotland having the highest locational grid charges in Europe and
an end to the volatility of the system operational charges. This
Bill seeks to do that. I hope that the UK Government see sense,
but there is an alternative: Scotland having full control of its
destiny.
Mr Speaker
There is nothing like using every second of the 10 minutes. Well
done.
Question put and agreed to.
Ordered,
That , , , , , Deirdre Brock, , , Brendan O’Hara, and present the Bill.
accordingly presented the
Bill.
Bill read the First time; to be read a Second time on Friday 3
December, and to be printed (Bill 175).