The energy-efficiency year that was ... and then wasn’t

National Energy Foundation, energy efficiency
Reflections on 2015 — Kerry Mashford.

Last year was a traumatic one for those keen on improving energy efficiency and developing renewable energy. Dr Kerry Mashford of the National Energy Foundation looks back.

After the dust settled on last year’s unexpected General Election result, I wrote about what kind of energy-efficiency landscape we might see under a majority Government unfettered and unrestrained by a coalition. Although the Conservative manifesto was noticeably thin on firm energy-efficiency commitments, industry leaders took comfort from the fact that Amber Rudd, Secretary of State for Energy & Climate Change, wasn’t a climate sceptic, and I put my money on five key measures.

• Support of some kind for fracking and North Sea oil and gas.

• The removal of some green taxes and reduced support for on-shore wind.

• A dilution of the zero-carbon standard for new homes.

• A review of the ailing Green Deal.

• Some rolling back of previous energy-efficiency legislation.

However, how many of us could have predicted what actually happened? Under the Government’s much-repeated mantra of ‘keeping bills as low as possible for both hardworking families and businesses’, its approach has been described by some as ‘hasty’, ‘slash and burn’ and bypassing the usual parliamentary process. The result has been a systematic dismantling of previously-established green policies in favour of nuclear, fracking and a new ‘dash for gas’.

Where the axe fell in 2015

• Discontinuing support for the Green Deal Finance Company.

• Killing off the Green Deal and the Green Deal Home Improvement Fund.

• Abolishing feed-in tariff pre-accreditation.

• Scrapping the Code for Sustainable Homes.

• Removing tax relief on community energy schemes.

• Abolishing the zero-carbon standard for new homes.

• Scrapping the zero-carbon non-domestic buildings standard.

• Cancelling the competition for carbon capture and storage technology.

• Ending the allowable-solutions carbon-offsetting scheme.

• Closing the climate change levy exemption for zero-carbon energy.

• Cutting £700 million from the Renewable Heat Incentive budget.

• Increasing VAT on energy-saving measures.

• Reduction of the feed-in tariff by up to 65% but pulling back from a proposed 87% reduction following industry pressure.

• Ending new public subsidies for onshore wind.

• Closing the Renewable Obligation early.

• Reducing the guaranteed level of renewable obligation subsidy given to fossil-fuelled power stations converting to biomass.

• Introducing a second reverse capacity market auction creating an unexpected boost to the diesel generator market.

This reverse-gear strategy has also been criticised for creating uncertainty in the market and denting investor confidence. Constant change and the flip-flopping of policies makes for an insecure, uncertain and overly complex landscape, with damaging consequences to what is a strategically important sector. It also risks jeopardising the UK’s progress to a low-carbon economy. The long list of policy changes is summarised in the table.

In addition, the axe is currently hovering over:

• Green Investment Bank, which is to be sold into the private sector and will, as a result, lose its ‘green mandate’;

• Display Energy Certificates, which are the public sector’s main tool for measuring and tracking its energy efficiency.

The only crumbs of comfort are the promises of replacements for ECO and the Green Deal, both of which will be more ‘cost-effective’ than their predecessors and unambitious by comparison.

On a more positive note, it’s encouraging to see a focus on improving building performance and refurbishments that actually deliver what they predict, together with industry analyses of important issues in the form of the Bonfield review of consumer advice, protection, standards and enforcement for UK home energy efficiency and renewable-energy measures and the Hansford review of solid wall insulation.

In the refurbishment sector, the withdrawal of some Government interventions could potentially provide greater long-term stability, and enable industry to develop stronger offerings and sales pipelines, rather than being swished about by transient subsidies and incentives.

Early in December, the UN climate change talks in Paris agreed to limit global warming to below 2 K. The UK played an important role in getting the deal agreed, but many are now asking how the Government is going to meet this target after having rolled back on so many green and energy-efficiency policies.

New ECO and Green Deal schemes, a move to gas, the development of shale gas as a transition fuel (especially without carbon capture and storage) and closing our coal-fired power stations won’t go far enough to meet our Paris commitments.

My wish for the future is that this doesn’t lead the Government to respond with short-term actions that upset the market and create further instability. I also hope that any further interventions are outcome-focused, support the growth and development of refurbishment and construction businesses that deliver high-quality performing buildings and, above all, help those in fuel poverty to have better insulated, healthier homes they can afford to heat.

Dr Kerry Mashford is chief executive of the National Energy Foundation.

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