Kenny MacAskill (East Lothian) (Alba) I beg to move, That this
House has considered securing employment and community benefit in
the offshore renewables wind sector. It is pleasure to serve under
your chairmanship, Mr Betts. Today is St Andrew’s day, Scotland’s
national day, when Scots at home and abroad celebrate their native
land. There should be much to celebrate, as our nation has been
blessed with natural bounty. Sadly, that bounty has not always been
used for...Request free trial
(East Lothian) (Alba)
I beg to move,
That this House has considered securing employment and community
benefit in the offshore renewables wind sector.
It is pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mr Betts. Today
is St Andrew’s day, Scotland’s national day, when Scots at home
and abroad celebrate their native land. There should be much to
celebrate, as our nation has been blessed with natural bounty.
Sadly, that bounty has not always been used for the benefit of
the Scottish people. Decades ago, oil and gas were discovered off
Scotland’s shores, as they were, across the North sea, off
Norway’s. However, although Norway now possesses, from the
proceeds, a fund for future generations that the world rightly
envies, Scotland has seen its assets stripped and child poverty
soar. Areas that should have been revitalised were instead
deindustrialised. Nature’s bounty, which should have provided for
all, was taken by the few, and what should have transformed our
nation was squandered by Thatcher on smashing the unions and by
Blair on waging illegal wars.
However, nature’s good fortune has seen another bounty come
Scotland’s way, and once again the country has been blessed. For
long, our geography was an impediment, seeing us distant from
markets and facing additional costs, and our climate was a bind
or even a danger, as last weekend’s winds displayed. However, our
geography and climate are now also a natural bounty and blessing,
offering opportunities and advantages held by few others. Onshore
wind is well-established, wave and tidal energy are being
developed, and offshore wind offers huge potential.
The Prime Minister has stated that he wants the UK to become the
“Saudi Arabia of wind”. Indeed, the wind blows around the shores
of the British Isles, as elsewhere, but Scotland has 25% of
Europe’s—not just the UK’s—offshore wind potential, and it is off
Scotland’s shores that the real boon is located. Where is the
benefit for our country and communities? Where are the onshore
jobs that should follow in its wake? Where are the industries
that should be lured to locate and invest here? Moreover, where
are the benefits for communities where the turbines can be seen
from, are serviced by or where the energy comes ashore? What will
accrue to them?
In many ways, East Lothian is a microcosm of Scotland in regard
to this energy bounty. The Seagreen field is coming ashore at
Cockenzie, as well as Neart na Gaoithe at Thorntonloch and
Berwick Bank at Branxton, near Torness. These are not one or two
turbines, or dozens, but hundreds. It is not only the numbers,
but their size that is hugely impressive. These offshore turbines
are almost 50% bigger than those sited onshore that people
currently recognise. The power generated by them is massive too.
It is claimed that Berwick Bank alone will boost Scotland’s
renewable energy capacity by almost 30%. Such is its scale that
Berwick Bank alone will be capable of powering 5 million homes.
That is just under the population of Scotland, but more than
double the number of Scottish households.
For Scotland is blessed with a surfeit of energy, as it had and
indeed still has with oil and gas. It is capable of providing for
all our own needs, but also providing for others beyond our
borders. That is not just south of the border, but beyond the
shores of these islands as it is a global energy market now.
Having lost out on its oil and gas bounty, Scotland must not lose
out on its offshore wind. Fool me once, shame on you; fool me
twice, shame on me. It is why there must be action.
Scotland and its communities must benefit. Jobs must be created
in providing for offshore wind generation. Work and industries
must spring from being the point where the energy lands and where
energy costs should be cheaper, and where it should be logical
and economical to base a business. Communities that will face
some disruption from the siting of the turbines offshore or the
construction of transmission stations onshore must see tangible
benefits from the wealth that will flow through them.
Sadly, that has not been happening, which is why the debate is
required and the issues must be urgently addressed. I accept that
not all responsibility or culpability rests with the Minister or
his Government—although much does; I accept that the devolution
landscape sees energy reserved, but planning devolved. Similar
divides apply to industrial and fiscal policy. Accordingly, I do
not exculpate the Scottish Government, who have failed to use
their powers or demand the powers that are necessary. Their
failure to deliver manufacturing jobs at BiFab or Arnish is
shameful, but many more levers rest with the UK Government, which
is why they too must act.
East Lothian may not have the yards, but Fife and almost every
major Scottish estuary most certainly has. Scottish yards should
be booming, building the turbines that are required. Some were
shipyards, others came along through oil and gas installations,
but all of them exist and others could be established. The
skilled workforce is there, and it is crying out for this work
and these jobs. The orders should be going to these yards,
although I accept that such is the number of turbines required
that not all of them could be constructed in Scotland. But as it
is, only a few are being built in Scotland and most will be built
south of the border in England, or abroad. That is simply not
acceptable.
The UK Government are funding offshore wind manufacturing in
Teesside and on the Humber. Around 1,000 people are employed at
Siemens in Hull, and 750 people are employed at GE Renewable
Energy on Teesside, with even more people indirectly employed in
other jobs. They are providing for the Dogger Bank wind farm and
other developments off the coast of north-east England. Good on
them, I say, but where is the money for our yards and where are
the jobs for the wind farms off our coasts? Levelling up seems to
stop at the border.
Moreover, as the energy comes ashore, how will Scotland benefit?
At the moment, there is cabling work going on at Branxton and in
East Lothian. A cable is being constructed to take the energy
directly from East Lothian to Redcar, in the north-east of
England. A similar cable south is planned for energy coming
ashore further north in Scotland from offshore wind farms located
further north in the North sea. It is one thing sharing a bounty
with others; it is quite another to be exploited and to see our
natural resource being taken, with little benefit accruing to our
land or our communities.
As well as the turbine manufacturing jobs, where is the onshore
industry that should be springing up from being near to where
clean and cheap energy is landing? Such industry will not locate
in Scotland if the energy is just being cabled south, yet that
seems to be what is planned.
Also, where is the benefit for the communities? One place in
Scotland that did benefit from oil was Shetland. There, the
council negotiated a small payment from the companies landing the
oil at Sullom Voe. That impeded neither exploration nor
extraction, having been set at a modest rate, which was a boon
for communities without being a burden for developers. As a
result, Shetland has facilities—such as schools and sports
centres in small communities, and bus and ferry services—that
larger and urban communities in Scotland can only look at and
envy.
At present, onshore wind turbines attract community benefit from
developments. Even a single turbine or just a few turbines
onshore can see individuals and communities benefiting. But as it
was no doubt never imagined that turbines would be sited
offshore, no such system exists for offshore turbines. Why not?
Surely communities are as entitled to benefit from those turbines
that are off their shores as they are from those located on their
land.
I know that communities on both sides of the border have entered
into arrangements with developers, but two aspects remain
outstanding and they must be addressed. First, community benefits
should apply whether turbines are onshore or offshore; requiring
such payments to be made to communities should be statutory and
not made through guidance, or simply being voluntary or
discretionary for the operator.
Secondly, the rate to be paid should also be set nationally and
the money should be paid to the local council or community. It
should be for them to decide where and on what they wish to spend
their money; they should not be handouts from a developer,
subject to the developer’s whim or fancy. Shetland shows that it
can be done, and the benefit for Shetland’s communities shows why
it must be done.
In summary, I seek to ensure that Scotland benefits from the
renewables revolution off its shores, as it failed to do with the
discovery of oil and gas. The North sea bounty must come to
Scotland this time. First, what steps will the Minister take to
ensure that funds are available to develop turbine manufacturing
in Scotland, and to ensure that contracts for fields off
Scotland’s shores go to local yards, as is happening in
north-east England?
Secondly, what will the Minister do to ensure that Scotland
benefits from job creation where the energy comes ashore, and not
simply see the energy cabled south and the benefit enjoyed
elsewhere?
Thirdly, what will be done to end the discrimination against
Scottish sites caused by the absurd contracts for difference
pricing regime that prejudices Scotland and will be referred to
by my hon. Friend the Member for Kirkcaldy and Cowdenbeath
() in his comments?
Finally, will the Minister meet me to discuss how communities,
whether in Scotland or elsewhere in the UK, can benefit from
offshore wind as they do onshore wind through a regulated regime,
and a set fiscal regime that will benefit those communities? This
is a huge opportunity for Scotland. Our nation lost out on the
benefits from its oil and gas; it must not lose out on this
renewable windfall.
(Kirkcaldy and Cowdenbeath)
(Alba)
rose—
(in the Chair)
I had not been informed that the hon. Member wished to speak. Has
the hon. Member informed the mover and the Minister?
My apologies, Mr Betts; I am aware.
The Minister of State, Department for Business, Energy and
Industrial Strategy ()
I think, Mr Betts, that as they have given us quite a bit of
time, I am happy to let the Member speak.
(in the Chair)
The rules of the House are that if a Member wishes to speak in a
30-minute debate, they should inform both the mover and the
Minister in advance and then I should be notified. Nevertheless,
it is all sorted out now.
16:41:00
(Kirkcaldy and Cowdenbeath)
(Alba)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mr Betts. I
would like to thank and congratulate my hon. Friend the Member
for East Lothian () on securing this important
debate. On St Andrew’s day, it serves as a poignant opportunity
to consider how right can prevail over might. Might and power can
be used to silence and incarcerate, such as in the case of Craig
Murray in Scotland, who tastes freedom once again this St
Andrew’s day.
However, power and control can also be utilised to either stymie
or enable the potential of a people and of a nation. My Kirkcaldy
and Cowdenbeath constituency has a proud history of industry and
endeavour, from the world-renowned to the linoleum factories of
Nairn, and the Francis, Seafield, Kelty, Benarty and Cowdenbeath
pits, to name just a few. Our folk do not fear work; indeed, they
relish it.
In my youth, our folk worked doon the pits, on the ships, in the
shipyards and on the docks of Methil, Burntisland and Rosyth,
building rigs, servicing the naval fleet and working offshore. It
was great industry, but this was crumbs from the table. From the
Thatcher and Major Governments who put profit and privatisation
before people at every turn, who put tax cuts for the wealthy
before the financial security of a people, to the Blairite
disaster capitalist adventure of illegal war-making in the middle
east, and moving the Scottish maritime boundary, making 6,000
square miles of Scotland’s waters English.
I often hear Members from the Government Benches, and indeed
Government Ministers, crow about our how our campaign for
Scottish independence is a grievance. Well, they are right, and
it is a fully justified grievance. All the evidence needed exists
in the UK Government’s own archive, in the shape of the McCrone
report that Scottish economist Gavin McCrone presented to the
Heath Government in 1975, which revealed how North sea oil would
make an independent Scotland as prosperous as Switzerland.
The facts show that Scotland has been robbed of the embarrassment
of riches that North sea oil and gas could have provided to her
people. We just have to look to Norway to see that reality. Why
should the Scottish people believe a single word that any
Westminster Government utter when history provides every bit of
evidence necessary to demonstrate how easily false promises and
vows can be discarded and broken?
Instead, we have escalating child poverty; a pernicious and
vicious welfare state; and threats to the little control we do
possess through Trojan horse policies such as the United Kingdom
Internal Market Act 2020. None of this is helped by a supine
devolved Government who seem to have given up on even talking a
good game. The people of Scotland deserve so much better than
this.
Just off the Fife shore, a green industrial revolution is taking
place, but all that my constituents can do is observe. It has
delivered no meaningful employment to our communities, and the
only announcement to date from this Government was more crumbs
from the table in the shape of offshore jobs for service
engineers. That lack of ambition is sadly reflected back from
organisations such as Renewables Scotland, which claims that
Scotland has missed the chance to lead the charge on renewables
and can only hope for domestic service engineer jobs. This is
scandalous. Scotland is being plundered yet again, while our
people suffer real harm as a consequence of the acts and
omissions of their supposed Governments.
Scotland is replete with natural resources that, with focus and
investment, could lay the foundations for national prosperity, as
the transition towards a greener, more sustainable future gathers
pace. Fife’s skilled workforce, proximity to offshore development
sites and established fabrication facilities mean that the
kingdom is perfectly placed on the Forth estuary to be at the
forefront of the marine and green energy revolution. Harnessing
the established and potential assets on all shores of the firth
of Forth is key to enabling Scotland to end its dependency on
fossil fuels and establishing a thriving, green energy-based
economy.
In the context of the climate emergency, there is growing
evidence that political, public and corporate priorities are
beginning to align. Thus, a compelling case now exists for
Scotland to further its ambitions towards a prosperous,
zero-carbon economy. For this to be truly realised, any such
prosperity must seek to build tangible local results, such as
high-quality employment, world-leading research and development,
and a national prosperity fund. We must not allow the Scottish
people to be denied the benefits of an energy boom by remote or
disengaged Governments again.
My constituency has the potential and is bursting with ambition.
Brexit has neutralised the excuse of state aid, but there has
been no change to contracts for difference and no conditionality
on local employment or supply chains. Transmission costs are
driving investment away, so there is a need to rapidly consider
viable alternatives, such as microgrids, which generate and
deliver energy locally, creating jobs and driving community
prosperity.
In the green energy revolution, Scotland is again well positioned
to benefit and lead the charge. With less than 1% of Europe’s
population, Scotland possesses 33% of Europe’s carbon storage
potential, 25% of Europe’s offshore wind resources, 25% of
Europe’s tidal energy resources and 10% of Europe’s wave energy
potential, but yet again it is Westminster that stands in our
way.
Scotland’s oil and gas sector has been unbelievably badly managed
by successive UK Governments and we cannot allow this opportunity
to be squandered by yet more Westminster Governments that see
Scotland’s wealth as something to be exploited, rather than
stewarded and safeguarded for future generations. Only by taking
full control of our future will the renewable sector reach its
full potential, so our people can lift their gaze and realise
their full potential.
(in the Chair)
Order. The Minister needs a reasonable amount of time to finish
and he was unaware that you were going to speak in this debate,
Mr Hanvey. Can you conclude now please?
I am concluding now and I have fewer than 50 words to say.
I do not expect a particularly constructive or useful response
from the Government, but that is okay because any indifference,
dismissal or vague commitment serves only to strengthen the
argument in favour of independence as a route to prosperity.
Scotland’s natural wealth will be one of the key foundations of
our future prosperity as an independent nation. There is much
work to do but opportunities galore for Scotland, for Fife, and
for Kirkcaldy and Cowdenbeath.
16:48:00
The Minister of State, Department for Business, Energy and
Industrial Strategy ()
I begin by congratulating the hon. Member for East Lothian
() on securing this important
debate.
We know that renewable electricity generation is essential to the
decarbonisation of the power sector and the UK’s efforts to
reduce greenhouse gas emissions and reach net zero, which was
recently discussed in Scotland at COP26 in Glasgow, which I was
delighted to attend on behalf of the UK Government. Offshore wind
will be a vitally important tool in creating the low-cost, net
zero energy system of the future.
We can be enormously proud that the UK offshore wind industry has
already made great strides, in terms of both the production of
major turbine components and their deployment, moving from
installing about one turbine every week to about one every single
day. Turbine sizes have grown by 700%, from 2 MW to 15 MW.
Alongside this, the costs of offshore wind have fallen
dramatically since 2015. The first contract for difference
allocation round cleared at around £114 per megawatt-hour. In the
last round, in 2019, that fell to less than £40 per
megawatt-hour. That is a reduction of around two thirds to 70% in
the cost of offshore wind. It has been a resounding success, and
we expect both the increasing scale of turbines and cost
reduction to continue.
I agree with the hon. Member for East Lothian that it is
absolutely right that local communities should benefit
economically from major new manufacturing infrastructure
projects. We want to see thousands of people all over the country
working in new green, high-quality jobs in our renewables sector.
Therefore, the Government are investing heavily to support the
offshore wind sector, from innovation to the manufacture of major
wind turbine components, all the way through to the deployment
and connection to the grid.
Let me deal with a few of the points raised. I will first stress
that these decisions taken by the UK Government have brought huge
benefits. When I was at the Treasury in 2015, a lot of the
decision making behind contracts for difference was
controversial. Working with the Department for Business,
Innovation and Skills, as it then was, we thought that the CfD
regime would lead to a big boost in the UK’s renewable energy
and, by scaling up, would reduce costs, both of the energy
produced and that of building the infrastructure. We turned out
to be right on that.
There was also investment brought in by the UK Government. When I
was at the Department for International Trade, for four or five
years, I was going around getting investment into the UK offshore
wind sector, particularly from European countries, such as Spain
and Denmark, and companies looking to invest in this country. A
key part of that has been to ensure that the supply chain also
benefits the United Kingdom overall, including Scotland. About
60% or more of the supply chain is based in the UK. A lot of the
key decisions have been the right ones taken by the UK
Government.
The hon. Member for East Lothian raised a point about Wick
harbour. We have seen that harbour revitalised by the development
of the Beatrice offshore wind project. As more projects are
developed north of the border, we expect similar benefits to be
realised for other harbours. We heard from the hon. Member for
Kirkcaldy and Cowdenbeath (), who provided a long
history—a tour de force—that started with Ted Heath, moved
through Margaret Thatcher and John Major, and ended with him
describing the Scottish Government as a “supine devolved
Government”. The hon. Gentleman mentioned the word “grievance”
and said it was not one, but I think he is lumping grievance on
to grievance. His latest grievance is with the Scottish
Government, not just that of the UK.
Offshore wind has a central role in the Government’s
decarbonisation and levelling-up ambitions. Developing the
economic benefits that the UK derives from offshore wind took
prime position in the Prime Minister’s 10-point plan for a green
industrial revolution, published this time last year. The
10-point plan also includes a target to deploy 1 GW of floating
wind in the UK by 2030, as a stepping-stone to further growth
through the 2030s and beyond.
The hon. Gentleman for East Lothian mentioned the potential of
the sector, but it is not just the potential; it is the reality.
The UK has the world’s largest installed offshore wind
capacity—we are No. 1. As the Prime Minister says, we are the
Saudi Arabia of wind. It is not just potential but a realised
thing that is happening every day. We are not content with just
10 GW; we have a commitment to quadruple that over the next
decade, to 40 GW. Scotland will play a massive role in that
commitment.
Last month the Prime Minister announced up to £160 million in new
funding to support the development of large-scale floating
offshore wind ports and factories all over the UK. That follows
on from the success of the offshore wind manufacturing investment
support scheme, which has so far this year enabled the
announcement of two major port hubs, and six offshore wind
manufacturing investments, representing £1.5 billion in public
and private sector investment, and set to support up to 3,600
jobs in deprived areas of the UK by 2030.
Scotland, as we know, has a very rich industrial heritage, and I
am confident that the skills already present in Scotland, proven
over the decades in the oil and gas sector, will be transferred
into a world-leading capability in manufacturing for the offshore
wind sector— a key part of our North sea transition deal.
Yesterday I chaired the North Sea Transition Forum with the
industry, Oil & Gas UK, the Oil and Gas Authority and the
Scottish Government.
The point is that to make that transition means recognising the
fantastic skillset. One of my first visits in this role was to
Aberdeen, where I saw that skillset at first hand, working with a
lot of the incredible universities—I visited Robert Gordon
University, for example, whose transition unit is working on how
we transfer the skills that have been vital for the UK as a whole
and Scotland in particular for the past 50 years over to sectors
such as offshore wind. The answer is that there is a lot of
overlap between offshore hydrocarbons and offshore wind, but
making that transition is a key part, and there are many people
helping to deliver that.
That is why the North sea transition deal announced in March
contains key commitments on skills, including a commitment from
the oil and gas sector to develop an integrated people and skills
plan by March 2022, to support the sector’s transition and
diversification. Both Government and the sector have also
committed to supporting the work of the Energy Skills Alliance.
Its work will address, among other things, future skills demands
of new energy sectors, all-energy training and standards and
all-energy apprenticeships.
In particular, Scotland could benefit greatly from nascent
technologies on the horizon. I mention floating offshore wind
again, but just last week we announced a £20 million ring-fenced
contract for difference fund for tidal. There is huge potential
for Scotland to take advantage of its excellent geography. The
same extends to parts of Wales and the Isle of Wight and other
particular parts of the UK that have excellent tidal resources.
We announced a ring-fenced pot within the next CfD auction for
tidal energy.
Will the Minister give way?
I do not think I have time—I am afraid I only have one minute,
and the hon. Gentleman got a pretty fair crack of the whip
earlier, to be frank.
Floating offshore wind is an area that has already inspired huge
interest from developers in Scotland—hardly surprising, given the
rich deep-water resource and manufacturing capability in
Scotland. It is no coincidence that the world’s two largest
floating offshore wind arrays, Hywind and Kincardine, have been
developed in Scottish waters. The Celtic sea is also a major
development opportunity.
Decisions on how specific projects can deliver local benefits are
generally a matter for developers—a point raised by the hon.
Member for East Lothian. However, we want developers and
operators to provide community benefits consistent with relevant
guidance and good practice principles, building on experience in
other renewables sectors.
This debate is testament to the strong cross-party agreement that
we want to leverage the UK’s world-leading offshore wind sector,
to maximise the economic benefits enjoyed by our coastal
communities across the UK, including in Scotland. I close by
thanking the hon. Gentleman again for securing this enlightening
and important debate.
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