Electricity Capacity (Amendment) Regulations 2017 Motion to Approve
5.07 pm Moved by Lord Prior of Brampton That the draft
Regulations laid before the House on 23 March be approved.
Relevant documents: 27th Report, Session 2016–17, from the Joint
Committee on Statutory Instruments The Parliamentary
Under-Secretary of State,...Request free
trial
Electricity Capacity (Amendment) Regulations 2017
Motion to Approve
5.07 pm
Moved by
-
That the draft Regulations laid before the House on 23
March be approved.
Relevant documents: 27th Report, Session 2016–17, from the
Joint Committee on Statutory Instruments
-
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State, Department for
Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy (Lord Prior of
Brampton) (Con)
My Lords, the draft instrument seeks to amend two secondary
legislation packages for the capacity market. The powers to
make this implementing secondary legislation are found in
the Energy Act 2013, which, following scrutiny in the House
and the other place, received Royal Assent in December
2013, with cross-party support. The five changes contained
in the draft instrument are essentially technical to
improve fairness, ensure the competitiveness of auctions
and provide important clarifications to scheme operations.
They were supported by the majority of respondents in
consultation.
Before I explain the changes in detail, it may be helpful
as a reminder to noble Lords if I say a few words of
background about the capacity market itself. Ensuring that
families and businesses across the country have secure,
affordable energy supplies that they can rely on is a top
priority. We are facing challenges to electricity security
of supply resulting from the closure of older plant and the
move towards less polluting, but more intermittent and
inflexible technologies, such as solar, wind and nuclear.
That is why we have the capacity market; this scheme
ensures that there will be sufficient electricity capacity
in Great Britain for this winter and beyond. It gives
generators confidence that they will receive the revenue
they need to maintain, upgrade and refurbish their existing
plant, and to finance and build new plant to come on stream
as and when existing assets retire. It also ensures that
those who are able to shift demand for electricity away
from periods of greatest scarcity, without detriment to
themselves and to the wider economy, are incentivised to do
so.
It does this by offering capacity providers, who are
successful in competitive auctions held four years and one
year ahead of delivery, a steady, predictable revenue
stream on which they can base their future investments. In
return for these capacity payments, providers must meet
their obligations to deliver electricity or reduce demand
at times of system stress or face penalties.
The capacity market is working. Fierce competition between
providers in the auctions held to date meant that we
obtained the required capacity at prices below the levels
many had expected. That is good for consumers as it
translates to lower costs on bills. The capacity market is
driving investment in new, flexible capacity. The most
recent four-year-ahead auction secured over 3.4 gigawatts
of new-build generating capacity, including combined-cycle
gas turbines, open-cycle gas turbines, small flexible
engines and battery storage, as well as 1.4 gigawatts of
demand-side response.
The clear message from industry and investors is that the
mechanism retains their confidence and is the best
available approach for ensuring our long-term security of
supply. Industry and investors also stress that regulatory
stability is crucial but that the scheme, operating in a
rapidly changing environment, must be regularly reviewed to
ensure it remains fit for purpose. The changes set out in
the instrument are the latest in a series of amendments
that ensure the scheme is kept relevant and workable. I
will briefly expand on the amendments.
First, the instrument amends the method by which the costs
of the capacity market are recouped from suppliers. It was
felt the current supplier charge arrangements potentially
gave an unfair advantage to embedded generators—smaller
generators connected to the lower voltage distribution
network—and could distort the outcome of the capacity
auctions. That arises because, under current arrangements,
suppliers are charged according to their share of total
demand at peak times, measured by the demand they place on
the transmission grid. That is their net demand. By
contracting with embedded generators to run over winter
peaks, some suppliers are able to reduce their net demand
and therefore their share of capacity market costs, with
others having to pay more. With some of the savings
inevitably being passed on to the embedded generators, such
arrangements unintentionally risk giving them a double
payment for what is essentially only one contribution to
security of supply. The instrument addresses the issue by
amending the basis of the capacity market supplier charge
and settlement costs levy from net to gross demand. That is
a fairer way of sharing costs between suppliers: it ensures
suppliers’ costs reflect their overall demand and helps
ensure a level playing field between different generators
in the auctions.
Secondly, the instrument seeks to prevent new and
refurbishing plants being overcompensated in the capacity
market where they are also in receipt of aid through risk
finance schemes such as the enterprise investment scheme,
seed enterprise investment schemes and venture capital
trusts. Currently, there is a risk of double subsidy, which
would likely distort the outcome of the capacity auctions.
To ensure fair competition and value for money for
consumers, the instrument asserts that where a capacity
provider has accessed investment through one of these risk
finance schemes to fund capital expenditure, their capacity
payments must be reduced until such a time as this has been
off-set. These off-setting arrangements ensure that the
total amount of aid is capped at the amount awarded in the
capacity market auction.
Thirdly, the instrument seeks to remove an inconsistency in
the way demand-side response capacity is de-rated relative
to other capacity types. De-rating is the process by which
the volume of a provider’s capacity is adjusted to reflect
the reliability of the technologies being used. Unlike
other participants, demand-side response providers can
nominate a lower amount of capacity to bid into an auction
than the capacity they estimated at pre-qualification
stage, but that nominated amount is not currently subject
to de-rating. The instrument addresses that by ensuring
that the nominated value is de-rated, thereby improving the
overall reliability of the capacity that is procured. I
hope noble Lords have got that.
Fourthly, the instrument clarifies the requirement that
capacity market participants maintain credit cover until
they have fully discharged all the requirements against
which the credit cover has been lodged. In addition, the
instrument puts beyond doubt that a party’s credit cover
will not be drawn down where a termination fee is due
unless the termination fee is unpaid.
Finally, the instrument amends the name, but not the
substance, of the capacity market warning—a notification
that must be issued in specific circumstances under the
scheme. Revision to the capacity market notice better
reflects the nature of the notification and will be clearer
for participants.
My department published two consultations on these changes
during September and October last year. In total, 38
responses were received across the two consultations. There
was significant support for the majority of the proposals
raised. I look forward to hearing what noble Lords have to
say about the proposed changes.
-
(LD)
My Lords, I am grateful to the Minister for reminding us of
the long hours we spent on the primary legislation with the
noble Lord, , who is in his
place on the Labour Front Bench. We are sadly missing a
previous Member of this House, , who
understood absolutely all this very complicated
legislation. Because it is so complicated it is not
surprising that after a period of time we need to make some
adjustments to it. It would appear that most people
involved in this complicated market are in favour of the
adjustments the Government wish to make to the previous
legislation.
However, one of the areas in which I was involved in my
early days in this House was the committee that looks at
secondary legislation. In those days we looked quite
carefully at the way government departments deal with these
matters. There are rules laid down. Given that the way we
deal with secondary legislation means we cannot really
change it very much, it is important that government
departments stick to the rules. I know that committee has
highlighted this over the years. I draw the Minister’s
attention to the fact that although they held consultations
at the end of 2016, one of which closed in December, they
did not respond to them until 22 March 2017. We will
discuss another instrument in a moment and I will raise
similar issues then.
I am happy to support what the Government are doing. It
seems uncontroversial, but I charge the Minister, now he is
in the department, with looking at the way they follow the
rules on how we consult on and deal with secondary
legislation.
-
(Lab)
My Lords, I also thank the Minister for his introduction to
the regulations before your Lordships’ House. I agree with
him that they are by and large technical in nature. I
second the remark by my noble friend on the Liberal
Democrat Front Bench that we miss Lord Jenkin for all the
understanding he brought to the House on these quite
technical matters.
We are in favour of the amendment regulations tonight
because they introduce refinements, clarifications and new
wording to manage the system around the operation of the
capacity market. From my reading of the Explanatory
Memorandum, which is excellent— I thank the Minister’s
department for its clarity—I commend the Minister and his
team for introducing these regulations to correct the
imperfections in the original instrument, which could have
led to double payments and loopholes that could have been
exploited to the detriment of the consumer. However, that
is not to say that there is universal approval for the
capacity market. There is a debate to be had regarding
whether it has achieved its objectives and whether it is
good value for money. While strictly speaking the capacity
market is not the subject of the regulations, I
nevertheless have one or two questions to put to the
Minister on how it is operating.
I liken the capacity market to a quasi-insurance policy. I
agree that the lights going out would be a catastrophic
event with severe consequences for the Minister, his
Government and the nation. The capacity market is designed
to ensure that this will never happen. This winter,
2017-18, is the start of the first delivery year and the
date from which payments will start, even though there have
been five capacity market auctions to date. The contracts
for these auctions are for either one year or four years.
What is the grossed-up value of these contracts, which I
understand is somewhere near the total cost of the capacity
market for availability of energy sources until 2021,
excepting that there are also the one-year contracts to be
awarded for the next three years? Is it useful to consider
this figure in assessing the value-for-money aspects of the
policy against achieving its objectives? The Minister in
the other place suggested that the increase in customer
bills amounted to £2 per customer per year. My question to
the Minister is to understand the grossed-up figure that
has been paid to generators and, from that, the size of the
bill to the public.
The answer to the question regarding the success of this
quasi-insurance is mixed. First, there will be no
blackouts—I am sure that the Minister will be able to sleep
well at night—but perhaps he could give some assurances
regarding the “black start” that would be needed to
re-energise the network following any blackout.
Secondly, has the certainty of return from the capacity
market brought forward investments, especially in new gas
build? Here, the policy does not seem entirely to be
working. Do the plans to which the Minister drew attention
in his opening remarks finally translate into certainty of
new build being on the horizon?
Thirdly, is the cost to the consumer worth while, and has
it been effective? I think that I can reply on the
Minister’s behalf and say that to a certain extent it has
already brought benefits in that the spikes in cost in
marginal supplies to the grid have been reduced. Volatility
has been lessened, which has already reduced net costs
through bills to the consumer. Nevertheless, how likely
would blackouts have been without the existence of the
capacity market? That is the ultimate insurance question.
Lastly, has the capacity market brought flexibility and a
diverse mix of energy sources to security of supply? On the
demand-side response, the auctions are only for one-year
contracts, which could hardly be described as bringing
certainty. Can the Minister confirm whether there are plans
to bring forward four-year auctions for DSR? Have the
Government considered bringing forward the statutory review
date of this policy from being four years into its
operation? There could be other points along the way that
are sooner than that at which some of these questions could
bring forward further amendments.
-
My Lords, I think that I can thank both the noble Baroness
and the noble Lord for supporting the regulations. They are
pretty technical and complicated, but they correct perhaps
inevitable imperfections in the original legislation passed
in 2013.
The noble Lord, , raised a
number of other more profound issues which I hope he will
agree do not pertain directly to the matter in hand, but
perhaps I may try to answer some of the questions that he
raised. I think that his fundamental question was whether
the capacity market is value for money. Using his analogy
of the insurance market, the total gross premium that we
have paid over the period to 2020-21 is £3.35 billion. That
is the premium that we have paid to obviate the possibility
of the lights going off over that period. Whether or not
that is value for money, the noble Lord will have to draw
his own conclusions. I think it is quite hard to assess
that, except for the fact that if the lights did go off it
would be a catastrophe. In the context of the British
economy, that may be a premium worth paying. That is a
subjective view, and he will have his own thoughts on that.
The noble Lord raised a number of other issues, to which I
do not have a reply—at least, I cannot reply in the way
that I would like to be able to. He asked four other
questions. He answered one of them himself, fortunately, so
that leaves me three other questions to address. One was:
has this brought forward new investment in generation? The
answer is that it has. I mentioned some in my speech.
Whether it has brought forward enough is probably the
question that he was asking, and he related that to the
nuclear investment. I would like to think about that, if I
may, and write to him afterwards. Related to that, he
asked: has this brought forward new alternative capacity? I
guess by that he meant wind, solar and the like. The answer
has to be: yes, it has.
-
I agree with a lot of what the Minister has said but
nevertheless draw his attention to the fact that, as yet,
onshore wind is not allowed to compete.
-
The noble Lord is absolutely right: because it is an
intermittent source, it is not eligible for the capacity
market. I will have to write to him about whether or not
the capacity market itself has brought forward alternative
capacity beyond that which I mentioned earlier.
Finally, he asked about the statutory review date in the
primary legislation. Again, I will have to look and see
when that date is and write to him.
I should also respond to the noble Baroness, Lady Maddock,
who asked about how we responded to the consultation. I
apologise if we did not follow the rules correctly. We will
do better next time.
On the basis of that response and the letters I intend to
write to the noble Lord, I commend these regulations to the
House.
Motion agreed.
Electricity Supplier Obligations (Amendment and Excluded
Electricity) (Amendment) Regulations 2017
Motion to Approve
5.27 pm
Moved by
-
That the draft Regulations laid before the House on 28
March be approved.
Relevant documents: 32nd Report, Session 2016–17, from the
Secondary Legislation Scrutiny Committee, 27th Report,
Session 2016–17, from the Joint Committee on Statutory
Instruments
-
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State, Department for
Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy (Lord Prior of
Brampton) (Con)
My Lords, these regulations amend the Electricity Supplier
Obligations (Amendment & Excluded Electricity)
Regulations 2015. They make provision for indirectly
exempting eligible energy-intensive industries from part of
the cost of funding the contracts for difference scheme.
They aim to avoid putting these industries at a significant
competitive disadvantage.
The transition to low-carbon—and the securing of our energy
supplies—must be done in a way which minimises the cost to
business and domestic consumers. Our industrial gas prices
are internationally competitive but our industrial
electricity prices have moved out of line with other
European countries. The UK’s industrial electricity prices
for large consumers in the EU 15 were the highest after
Italy’s in 2016, as set out in The Clean Growth Strategy.
This places UK electricity-intensive manufacturing
industries at a competitive disadvantage and increases the
risk of some deciding to relocate.
In order to meet our legally binding climate change and
renewable energy targets, we have implemented a number of
policies designed to incentivise generation of electricity
from renewable resources. The costs of these policies are
recovered through obligations and levies on suppliers,
which pass these additional costs on to their customers.
This results in electricity bills being higher than they
otherwise would have been.
The CfD scheme is such a policy. It gives greater certainty
and stability of revenues to electricity generators by
reducing their exposure to volatile wholesale prices. The
scheme is financed through a compulsory levy on electricity
suppliers, which pass the costs on to domestic and business
users through their electricity bills. The levy currently
stands at almost £2.52 per megawatt hour. The funding costs
of the CfD can reduce the attractiveness of the UK as an
investment location and increase the risk that companies
will invest or even move elsewhere. This is a scenario we
wish to avoid, particularly as we exit the EU.
We intend to safeguard the competitiveness of those
energy-intensive industries that are exposed to the
additional costs arising from the CfD by exempting them
from a proportion of these costs. An exemption scheme
allows for real-time changes in energy use to be taken into
account and provides certainty to business. The European
Commission approved our state aid proposal to exempt
certain EIIs from the cost of the CfD in December 2015.
The statutory instrument before us updates and improves the
2015 regulations. It brings them into line with the terms
of our state aid approval, allowing us to commence the
scheme. We recognise that the exemption will redistribute
the cost of financing the CfD among other electricity
consumers. We estimate that this will increase annual
household electricity bills by around £1 between 2018-19
and 2023-24. None the less, we have taken steps to reduce
consumer bills, which are now lower than they might
otherwise be. Indeed, our energy efficiency policies
reduced the average household energy bill by £161 in 2016.
After taking account of the cost of policies for delivering
cleaner energy, supporting vulnerable households and
investing in upgrading our buildings, there was a net
saving of £14 on the average household energy bill in 2016.
Energy efficiency is the best long-term solution for
tackling fuel poverty.
Since April, 70% of the £640 million per year energy
company obligation has been focused on low-income
households through the affordable warmth part of the
scheme. This will upgrade the energy efficiency of more
than 300,000 homes per year, tackling the root cause of
fuel poverty. Certain households can also get £140 off
their electricity bill for winter 2017-18 under the warm
home discount scheme.
These regulations amend the original 2015 regulations.
These amendments are necessary to bring those regulations
into line with the Commission’s state aid approval. We are
also making certain technical changes to the regulations to
improve the administration of the scheme. The effects of
the amendments include, among others: changes to
eligibility; allowing new or restructured businesses to
claim the benefit of the exemption; a requirement on
beneficiaries to notify us, to help us ensure that they
receive the exemption to the correct level and only if they
are eligible; and allowing a company to apply for the
exemption if it does not obtain electricity directly from a
licensed electricity supplier.
The House of Lords Secondary Legislation Scrutiny Committee
raised a number of points relating to consultation and
timing, provision for direct competitors and the impact on
consumer bills. I will summarise the main points. The
policy to exempt eligible energy-intensive industries from
a proportion of the costs of CfD had been subject to three
previous consultations. The third consultation covered
technical amendments to the regulations rather than policy
changes, as the policy had already been consulted and
agreed on previously. Our original intention was for these
regulations to come into force at the end of February.
However, some of the technical issues needed further
consideration to ensure that the amended regulations
achieve their aim. We involved stakeholders throughout the
whole of this process.
Our original intention had been to provide relief to direct
competitors—businesses which do not meet the eligibility
criterion on electricity intensity but which manufacture
the same product as eligible companies in the same sector.
This was to create a level playing field and prevent market
distortions within sectors. We submitted a state aid
notification to the European Commission to address this
issue. However, the Commission does not think our proposal
is compatible with the relevant state aid guidelines. We
are currently considering alternative options which may be
open to us within the scope of these guidelines.
These draft regulations will make the necessary changes to
the 2015 regulations to allow us to exempt eligible
energy-intensive industries from up to 85% of the indirect
costs of funding the CfD scheme. As well as providing these
businesses with greater long-term certainty, the measures
set out in these regulations will reduce the price
differential between eligible energy-intensive industries
and their international competitors, mitigating against the
risk that these companies are put at a significant
competitive disadvantage and might choose to move their
production abroad. I commend these regulations to the
House.
-
(LD)
I am grateful to the Minister for ranging a little wider
than the regulation before us. I was going to ask him about
how some of this fitted in with the Government’s wider
policy aims, particularly on decarbonisation. I recognise
that industries that are intensive users of energy find
some of the decarbonising regulations quite difficult. I
recognise that there is a balance to be struck, but I would
be interested to know whether the department has looked
carefully at or has any figures about what the balance will
be on decarbonisation after this.
The Minister also replied a little bit to the criticisms of
the Secondary Legislation Scrutiny Committee. I read with
interest what it had to say because six weeks are
recommended for consultation, but there were precisely five
weeks, and it is rather bad practice to consult across the
summer holiday period, which is what the Government did.
That was pretty unfortunate. They were trying to get
regulations in place by February 2017. In the end, they did
not come until March, so I think something is not working
quite right in the Minister’s department. He is fairly new
there, so I challenge him to see whether in the next year
it can have less criticism from the Secondary Legislation
Scrutiny Committee when it brings forward matters such as
this.
Apart from that, I recognise that the Government are trying
to balance several things: how they can help industries
that are intensive users, the regulations for
decarbonisation and state aid rules from Europe. I
recognise that that is not easy. I hope they have it right.
I cannot profess to understand some of the very complicated
matters in these types of regulations—I wish we had
here as he
would put us right if we had got it wrong. We are happy to
support these regulations as far as they go. I hope we are
not supporting something that we will regret in future.
-
(Lab)
I thank the Minister again for his clear introduction to
the regulations before the House tonight. As on the
previous regulations, the amendments to the 2015
regulations are largely technical, although in this case it
is largely as a result of receiving state aid approval
which requires these amendments. The Government have also
brought forward other technical amendments to clarify the
2015 regulations and to improve their workings. I am
content to approve the regulations as they reduce the
disadvantages to energy-intensive industries, but they give
rise to many serious questions concerning the impact of the
policy and the relative effect on different businesses and
their competitiveness.
The main contentious issue arises from the exclusion in
these regulations of the intended extension of relief to
energy-intensive businesses that do not qualify as having
high energy costs as specified in the order. While the
European Commission was happy to approve the 2015
regulations, subject to the alterations we are debating
tonight, it was not happy to include the extension the
Government sought for businesses other than those specified
as being energy intensive.
In the 32nd report of your Lordships’ Secondary Legislation
Scrutiny Committee, dated 27 April 2017, it seems the
Government are happy to drop this altogether with the
thought that the CFD exemption will not have a significant
effect on competition within the UK after all. Can the
Minister clarify what sort of businesses these are, what
their response is to the change in the Government’s
position and what the cost is of the competitive
disadvantage that they no longer consider significant? Has
the assessment changed following dialogue with the
commission? The Government’s answer refers only to the UK.
What is the competitive position of these excluded
businesses internationally? On Brexit, perhaps the Minister
could outline the Government’s intention regarding state
aid provisions that are part of EU membership once we
leave. Is it the Government’s intention merely to amend the
regulations to include the original intention once the UK
has indeed left the EU?
The Secondary Legislation Scrutiny Committee was also
critical of the Government’s short consultation in summer
2016—the noble Baroness, Lady Maddock, drew attention to
this feature of the department as well. Perhaps the
complexity of the provisions and the adjustments in the
Government’s response could entail further and more
meaningful consultation regarding the numerous interactions
between various government policies influencing renewables
and the energy-intensive industries. There are also many
questions around the costs of the exemptions for
energy-intensive industries on other business and
consumers.
One of the questions debated in the other place concerned
the fall in the costs added by these regulations, from
£1.80 to £1 a year on consumer bills. The Minister in the
other place seemed unable to explain the significant drop.
What is the grossed-up cost of this measure? Is that what
has changed, or the estimates of the number of businesses
in the intensive energy sector? How is the discrepancy to
be explained? This highlights the complexity in analysing
and understanding the impact on businesses and how they
will react.
The Government have said they are developing a package of
measures to support businesses to improve their energy use
and efficiency. The Government are said to be revitalising
the Green Deal. They are also considering the costs to the
charitable sector. Could the Minister add to these
statements tonight and give any indication of timescales?
The Government have launched an independent review of the
cost of energy, to be chaired by Professor Dieter Helm, in
response to the report of your Lordships’ Economic Affairs
Committee. Can the Minister update the House on this?
The costs to the consumer of the various government schemes
are also subject to the levy control framework. This has
also come in for severe criticisms from many sides,
including the National Audit Office. Once again, the
Government have realised they must have a rethink and start
a review. How is that review progressing?
Although the regulations today can be approved in so far as
they clarify various measures the Government are
undertaking, nevertheless there are huge issues around the
Government’s framework that demand swift resolution.
-
I thank the noble Baroness and the noble Lord for
supporting these regulations. The noble Baroness referred
to the balance in recognising that some industries are not
able to compete on a level playing field if they are
heavily penalised by their electricity costs and that can
come into conflict with our decarbonisation policy. She is
of course absolutely right that it is a very difficult
balance. The steel industry is an example of a very
energy-intensive industry where if we did not address this
balance, we would have no industry at all. There is a
balance to be had. After all, from the planet’s point of
view, if all we succeed in doing is moving the steel
industry from here to another country, we have not improved
the lot of the planet at all in the process. She is quite
right to say there is a balance, and it is a balance that
we are constantly trying to get right. I note the noble
Baroness’s criticisms—indeed, her strictures—about the way
in which we conducted this consultation. I have taken them
on board and I am sure the department will do so too.
The noble Lord, , raised the
relative impact on competitors because the European
Commission did not accept our argument. I think we have a
serious argument here. It could be that there was a new
process for making steel that was less energy-intensive and
did not qualify for the exemption. That would put it at a
competitive disadvantage in relation to the more
energy-intensive process of making steel that did qualify,
thereby achieving the reverse of what we intend to do,
which is to move towards less energy-intensive methods of
making steel, chemicals, glass, ceramics or, for that
matter, anything else. So our argument to the Commission
was a good one and we should carry on pursuing it.
The noble Lord then raised the issue of what we are going
to do about the state aid provision programme post-Brexit.
I can say only that that is part of the negotiations that
are going on and it would not be for us to decide what to
do about that post-Brexit although, depending on the trade
agreements negotiated with Europe, there will be some
understandings about that issue to avoid unfair competition
between us and our European friends.
The noble Lord asked about the analysis behind why
household bills changed from £1.80 to £1. The update from
£1.80 to £1 was mainly because we reduced our estimate of
the volume of electricity consumed by eligible
energy-intensive industries. We have also updated our
estimates of CfD policy costs and volumes of electricity
sales to households and other consumers. I have to say I am
just reading out my brief; I do not know whether or not it
answers the question. I gather that it does. Excellent.
I believe the independent review by Dieter Helm is out
tomorrow. I stress that it is an independent review, not a
government one. I do not know what is in it but I think
there will be lots that is of interest to the noble Lord
when he reads it. If I have missed out any of the questions
raised, I will write to noble Lords later. On that basis, I
commend the draft regulations to the House.
Motion agreed.
|