Electricity suppliers to be obliged to buy 10 percent of power from renewables

Speaking at British Biogen’s annual conference, Anna Walker, Director General for Energy at the DTI, said the government would increase the obligation over time and introduce new trading arrangements in order to stimulate competition and bring electricity prices down.

Walker reassured renewable energy producers that existing NFFO contracts would be honoured. “The commitment is that anyone with an existing NFFO contract going forward 15 years will retain that contract. So it’s a long term commitment we’re making.”

NFFO is a scheme by which electricity companies are ‘obliged’ to buy a fixed amount of power from non-fossil power producers.

The Government is also planning an overhaul of the Electricity Trading Arrangements in order to bring electricity prices down, to stimulate the electricity market and to allow the replacement of NFFO. The new arrangements are expected to be in place by October 2000, Walker said.

The new arrangements will entail:

Walker went on to outline measures to address renewable energy producers’ concerns about the new arrangements. Producers are worried that the charges in the balancing mechanism are unpredictable for those who have unpredictable levels of generation.

They are also worried that the terms and conditions under which renewables operators are hooked up to local wires will not be fair.

To alleviate these problems, the government will:

Walker emphasised that the DTI sees the green market as “essential to the success of renewables” and that it could work with the new trading arrangements. “My own view is that the new electricity regulations would facilitate it,” she told the conference. “Most electricity companies have already launched a green tariff. I believe this will increase as companies become increasingly concerned with their brand name. In other words, I think the market place will militate to help the green market.”

European legislation could further help the cause of renewables by mirroring UK policy and encourage the sector’s expansion across Europe. Walker said she expected to see similar support mechanisms put into place in Europe along with the introduction of trading in green energy.