See factsheet attached. Supporting quotes: Neptune Sam
Laidlaw, Executive Chairman of Neptune Energy, said: “The
Energy Security Strategy breathes new life into the North Sea,
giving investors confidence to allocate significant capital to the
diverse range of energy supply we will need through the energy
transition. UK energy...Request free
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See factsheet attached.
Supporting quotes:
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Neptune
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Sam Laidlaw, Executive Chairman of Neptune
Energy, said:
“The Energy Security Strategy breathes new life into the
North Sea, giving investors confidence to allocate
significant capital to the diverse range of energy supply
we will need through the energy transition. UK energy
projects are national priorities – and the country cannot
wait.
“Neptune Energy will invest to support these priorities.
Immediately, we are increasing production from our Duva
field in Norway – enough gas to heat an additional
350,000 homes in this country. In the mid-term, we will
bring on further supply from our Seagull field in the UK
North Sea, starting early next year. And longer-term,
with our partners, we’ve agreed to invest $100m in
drilling an appraisal well at the Isabella discovery in
UK waters.
“Returns from those and other developments can be
recycled into new energy projects to help create a net
zero future. Repurposing of existing North Sea
infrastructure will pave the way for low carbon energy
hubs, CCS and hydrogen – maintaining diversity and
security of supply for decades to come.”
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Renewable UK
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RenewableUK’s CEO Dan McGrail said:
“The renewables industry is ready and able to work with
Government to deliver the ambitions set out in the new
Energy Security Strategy. Renewables can deliver new,
low-cost power quicker than any other option and wind
will be at the heart of a secure, affordable net
zero energy system.
Scaling up our ambitions for renewables, and increasing
speed of delivery, will help us cut bills and be more
energy independent. The sector is investing tens of
billions of pounds in cheap wind power, as well as
cutting-edge green hydrogen and floating wind technology,
so that the UK can reduce our dependence on gas. Green
investment is creating tens of thousands of jobs across
the UK to support levelling up and reaching net zero
faster. ”
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Ørsted
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Duncan Clark, Head of Region UK for Ørsted:
“This is a truly momentous day for the offshore wind
industry and for every consumer in the UK. Twenty
years ago there were only two wind turbines in UK waters,
and now, as a nation, we are leading the world in
offshore wind and making the changes we need to make
offshore wind the backbone of the UK’ electricity
system.
There is no doubt that the technology works, there is no
doubt that it is low-cost, and now with the Government
and industry committing to make the changes needed to
accelerate deployment, there is no doubt that we can
deliver the secure, low-cost electricity that the UK
needs.”
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Offshore Energies UK
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Deirdre Michie OBE, Chief Executive of Offshore
Energies UK, said:
“We are pleased that the government’s strategy recognises
the vital role of the UK’s offshore energies sector in
supporting energy security and the transition to net
zero. It will be crucial to ensuring our 2050 Paris
Agreement climate commitment stays on course.
“Through the North Sea Transition Deal, the first of its
kind by any G7 nation, we have a blueprint for delivering
security of energy supply through oil and gas, while
accelerating crucial cleaner energies like offshore wind,
hydrogen and carbon capture. We recognise that this is an
important moment in the energy transition and this
challenge requires everyone and every level of government
across the UK to be involved if this plan is to
succeed.”
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Hydrogen UK
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Clare Jackson, CEO of Hydrogen UK, said:
“We are thrilled that the Government has doubled down on
hydrogen by increasing the production target to 10GW,
recognising that hydrogen is a key part of the net zero
transition. This new goal will allow industry to unleash
investment, bring down costs and widen the use-case for
hydrogen, exploring its potential in transport, heavy
industry and to heat homes.”
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Centrica
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Chris O'Shea, CEO Centrica
“In recent months, we've seen the impact of global rising
energy prices on UK households. The geopolitical
landscape means it's more crucial than ever that the UK
has robust and secure supply chains for many things,
including energy. The British Energy Security Strategy is
something we can all get behind to protect the nation and
help households today and over the long term. We welcome
the Government's boost for renewables and nuclear and the
focus on kick-starting the hydrogen economy. This will
help us reduce our dependency on foreign gas and, done
properly, could help make us a net exporter of energy,
boosting our economy and creating well paid, highly
skilled jobs. We look forward to working closely with the
Government to do everything we can to bring this strategy
to life."
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shell
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Shell CEO, Ben van Beurden, said:
“This is a once-in-a-generation opportunity to ensure an
orderly transition to net zero while bolstering the UK’s
energy security and Shell is ready to play our part. We
plan to invest up to £25 billion in the UK energy system
over the next decade subject to Board approval, and more
than 75% of this is for low and zero-carbon technology.
Offshore wind, hydrogen and CCS will all be critical but
we need the right policy frameworks in place. We look
forward to working with government on the important
detail in order to make this a reality.”
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SSE
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Alistair Phillips-Davies, Chief Executive of
UK-listed low-carbon infrastructure company SSE,
said:
“The current energy crisis is driven by our reliance on
imported gas and it’s clear that the only way to tackle
the underlying cause is to ramp up investment in
home-grown, clean energy infrastructure; today’s package
represents a significant step towards that goal.
“We particularly welcome the increased ambition and
commitment to accelerate delivery of offshore wind as the
backbone of a cleaner, more secure energy system, but
also critically the acknowledgement that accelerating
investments into network infrastructure and flexible
technologies like pumped storage, alongside a developing
hydrogen economy, will be essential if we are to make
that ambition a reality.
“The intent from government today is clear; now it’s
about delivering it. We’re already investing £12.5bn in
low-carbon infrastructure over the next five years and
have announced today that we will be creating 5,000 new
skilled, green jobs in the process. And with further
policy development in the coming months, we can move from
ambition on paper to shovels in the ground and jobs in
local communities.”
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EDF
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EDF’s UK CEO Simone Rossi said:
“Britain is right to take control of its energy future,
with a step change in ambition for electricity from wind,
nuclear and solar, and greater energy efficiency.
“Building more new nuclear will reduce Britain’s
dependence on overseas gas and keep energy prices stable,
creating thousands of jobs while we’re doing it. At
Hinkley Point C we’re already building British nuclear,
with 3600 British businesses and 22,000 people making it
happen, including over 800 apprentices. The fastest way
to get more nuclear in Britain is get on with the next
two units at Sizewell C. It’s a copy of Hinkley Point C,
the design is approved and ready to go, and British
manufacturers are experts in how to build it. Building
more of the same design is the best way to bring down
costs and develop a strong UK supply chain.”
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Energy UK
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Emma Pinchbeck, Energy UK’s CEO said:
“Industry has committed to delivering a net zero
power system in the 2030s as the best way to
provide secure and cheap power to the UK. We
support the Government’s recommendations in the
Energy Security Strategy to accelerate the
deployment of domestic clean power sources, build a
modern energy system, and reduce demand for
volatile international gas”
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From: Lynch, Hannah (BEIS)
Sent: 06 April 2022 19:24
Subject: EMBARGOED UNTIL 22.30 WEDNESDAY 6
APRIL: Major acceleration of homegrown power in Britain’s plan
for greater energy independence
EMBARGOED UNTIL 22.30 WEDNESDAY 6 APRIL
Major acceleration of homegrown power in Britain’s plan
for greater energy independence
- The Prime Minister’s plan boosts Britain’s energy security
following rising global energy prices and volatility in
international markets
- Bold new commitments to supercharge clean energy and
accelerate deployment, which could see 95% of Great Britain’s
electricity set to be low carbon by 2030
- Ambitious, quicker expansion of nuclear, wind, solar,
hydrogen, oil and gas, including delivering the equivalent to one
nuclear reactor a year instead of one a decade.
- Over 40,000 more jobs in clean industries to be supported
thanks to measures, totalling 480,000 jobs by 2030
Cleaner and more affordable energy to be made in Great Britain
under bold plans to boost long-term energy independence, security
and prosperity.
The Government’s British Energy Security Strategy sets out how
Great Britain will accelerate the deployment of wind, new
nuclear, solar and hydrogen, whilst supporting the production of
domestic oil and gas in the nearer term – which could see 95% of
electricity by 2030 being low carbon.
The strategy will see a significant acceleration of nuclear, with
an ambition of up to 24GW by 2050 to come from this safe, clean,
and reliable source of power. This would represent up to around
25% of our projected electricity demand. Subject to
technology readiness from industry, Small Modular Reactors will
form a key part of the nuclear project pipeline.
A new government body, Great British Nuclear, will be set up
immediately to bring forward new projects, backed by substantial
funding, and we will launch the £120m Future Nuclear Enabling
Fund this month. We will work to progress a series of projects as
soon as possible this decade, including Wylfa site in Anglesey.
This could mean delivering up to eight reactors, equivalent to
one reactor a year instead of one a decade, accelerating nuclear
in Britain.
Our ambitious plans also include:
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Offshore wind: A new ambition of up to 50GW by
2030 – more than enough to power every home in the UK – of
which we would like to see up to 5GW from floating offshore
wind in deeper seas. This will be underpinned by new planning
reforms to cut the approval times for new offshore wind farms
from four years to one year and an overall streamlining which
will radically reduce the time it takes for new projects to
reach construction stages while improving the environment.
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Oil and gas: A licensing round for new North
Sea oil and gas projects planned to launch this Autumn, with a
new taskforce providing bespoke support to new developments –
recognising the importance of these fuels to the transition and
to our energy security, and that producing gas in the UK has a
lower carbon footprint than imported from abroad.
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Onshore wind: We will be
consulting on developing partnerships with a limited number of
supportive communities who wish to host new onshore wind
infrastructure in return for guaranteed lower energy bills.
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Heat pump manufacturing: We will run a
Heat Pump Investment Accelerator Competition in
2022 worth up to £30m to make British heat pumps,
which reduce demand for gas.
We will also look to increase the UK’s current 14GW
of solar capacity which could grow up
to five times by 2035, consulting on the
rules for solar projects, particularly on domestic and
commercial rooftops. We will aim to double our ambition
to up to 10GW of low carbon
hydrogen production capacity by 2030, with at least
half coming from green hydrogen and utilising excess offshore
wind power to bring down costs. This will not only provide
cleaner energy for vital British industries to move away from
expensive fossil fuels, but could also be used for cleaner power,
transport and potentially heat.
The Prime Minister, , said:
“We’re setting out bold plans to scale up and accelerate
affordable, clean and secure energy made in Britain, for Britain
– from new nuclear to offshore wind – in the decade ahead.
“This will reduce our dependence on power sources exposed to
volatile international prices we cannot control, so we can enjoy
greater energy self-sufficiency with cheaper bills.”
This plan comes in light of rising global energy prices, provoked
by surging demand after the pandemic as well as Russia’s invasion
of Ukraine. This will be central to weaning Britain off expensive
fossil fuels, which are subject to volatile gas prices set by
international markets we are unable to control, and boosting our
diverse sources of homegrown energy for greater energy security
in the long-term.
Consumer bills will be lower this decade than they otherwise
would be as a result of the measures this government has taken.
The British Energy Security Strategy will also increase the
number of clean jobs in the UK by supporting; 90,000 jobs in
offshore wind by 2028 – 30,000 more than previously expected;
10,000 jobs in solar power by 2028 – almost double our previous
expectations; and 12,000 jobs in the UK hydrogen industry by 2030
– 3,000 more than previously expected.
In total, the British Energy Security Strategy builds on the
Prime Minister’s Ten Point Plan for a Green Industrial
Revolution, and, together with the Net Zero Strategy, is driving
an unprecedented £100 billion of private sector investment into
new British industries including Offshore Wind and supporting
480,000 new clean jobs by the end of the decade.
Business and Energy Secretary, , said:
“We have seen record high gas prices around the world. We need to
protect ourselves from price spikes in the future by accelerating
our move towards cleaner, cheaper, home-grown energy.
“The simple truth is that the more cheap, clean power we generate
within our borders, the less exposed we will be to eye watering
fossil fuel prices set by global markets we can’t control.
“Scaling up cheap renewables and new nuclear, while maximising
North Sea production, is the best and only way to ensure our
energy independence over the coming years."
The strategy follows a series of engagement by the Prime Minister
and ministers across Government with key industry leaders,
including from the oil and gas, wind and nuclear sectors. The
Government continue to work with industry in the coming weeks to
drive forward these commitments as fast as industry can deliver.
Notes to editors:
- Prices of renewables have been consistently decreasing, with
the price of offshore wind dramatically falling by around 65%
since 2015, onshore wind prices down 50% since 2013, and
residential roof top solar panels are now less than 50 per cent
the price they were a decade ago.
- In the immediate term, we’re providing £9bn package of
support for consumers to manage rising cost of living. This
includes a £150 council tax rebate from April and a further £200
energy bill reduction in October to cut energy bills quickly for
the majority of households, while the energy price cap continues
to insulate millions of customers from even higher volatile
global gas prices. We are investing over £6.6bn to improve energy
efficiency and decarbonise heating over this parliament. In the
next few years this will deliver upgrades to over half a million
homes, delivering average bill savings of £300.
- To further drive down demand, and permanently reduce energy
bills in the longer term, a temporary VAT cut on the installation
of energy efficiency projects such as solar panels, insulation
and heat pumps will be in place for the next five years to 2027.
- Britain’s first nuclear power station in a
generation, Hinkley Point C, is currently under
construction, and we are in constructive negotiations with the
developer on the Sizewell C project in Suffolk. The two projects
combined would generate about 6.5GW of power.
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