Tag: Amber Rudd

  • Amber Rudd – 2016 Speech on the Referendum Result

    amberrudd

    Below is the text of the speech made by Amber Rudd, the Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change, in London on 29 June 2016.

    The decision to leave the EU is of historic significance.

    To be clear, Britain will leave the EU.

    The decision of the British people was clear.

    The key challenge now, as the Prime Minister and the Chancellor have stressed, is to work towards a settlement that is in the best interests of Britain.

    As a Government, we are fully committed to delivering the best outcome for the British people – and that includes delivering the secure, affordable, clean energy our families and business need.

    That commitment has not changed.

    Because while the decision to leave the EU is undoubtedly significant, the challenges we face as a country remain the same.

    How do we protect the strong economy that we have built over the past 6 years?

    How do we ensure we build the infrastructure we need to underpin our strong economy?

    How do we ensure people have good jobs that pay them well?

    The challenges to our environment remain the same.

    How do we make sure people can have respite from the daily grind in safe, clean green spaces near their home?

    How do we ensure we protect our most precious species?

    How do we ensure our green and pleasant land is protected both to respect the efforts of generations past and as a responsibility to generations to come?

    In particular, I want to underline our commitment to the issue over which I have primary responsibility; climate change.

    Climate change has not been downgraded as a threat. It remains one of the most serious long-term risks to our economic and national security.

    I was lucky enough to lead the world-class team of British diplomats at last year’s Paris climate talks. Our efforts were central to delivering that historic deal.

    And the UK will not step back from that international leadership. We must not turn our back on Europe or the world.

    Our relationships with the United States, China, India, Japan and other European countries will stand us in strong stead as we deliver on the promises made in Paris. At the heart of that commitment is the Climate Change Act.

    Its success has inspired countries across the world, and its structure of 5-yearly cycles inspired a core part of the Paris deal.

    I know many of you are keenly awaiting the outcome of our deliberation on the 5th Carbon Budget. You can expect the Government’s decision tomorrow.

    It is an important building block of our economy’s future and you would expect us to take our time to ensure we got the decision right.

    And however we choose to leave the EU, let me be clear: we remain committed to dealing with climate change.

    The Act was not imposed on us by the EU.

    The Climate Change Act in 2008 underpins the remarkable investment we have seen in the low carbon economy since 2010.

    Investment in renewables has increased by 42% since 2010.

    In 2014, 30% of all of Europe’s renewable energy investment took place in the UK.

    Annual support for renewables is expected to double during this Parliament to more than £10 billion.

    Last year I set out a clear vision for the future of our energy system.

    We said that security of supply would be our first priority. Since then we have consulted on changes to the capacity market which has further secured our position.

    We are likely to see significant investment following the auction later this year.

    Beyond that, we will continue to invest in clean energy.

    We have agreed to support up to 4GW of offshore wind and other technologies for deployment in the 2020s – providing the costs come down.

    At the same time we made tough decisions on support for renewable energy, reflecting our core belief that technologies should be able to stand on their own two feet.

    We remain committed to new nuclear power in the UK – to provide clean, secure energy.

    Government has prepared the ground for a fleet of new nuclear stations. Three consortia have proposals to develop 18GW of new power stations at six new sites across the UK.

    These will support more than 30,000 jobs across the nuclear supply chain over the coming years.

    We have announced record investment in new heat networks, to enable new and innovative ways of heating our homes and businesses.

    And we made a commitment to closing unabated coal-fired power stations – a commitment that was praised by leaders across the world.

    All these commitments remain in place. They will help us rebuild our energy infrastructure.

    And I am certain that future investment in this sector will continue to flow to Britain’s strong economy.

    As the Chancellor made clear earlier this week, thanks to the reforms of this Government, the United Kingdom approaches the challenges of leaving the EU from a position of strength.

    Growth has been robust.

    The employment rate is at a record high.

    And the budget deficit has been brought down from 11% of national income, and was forecast to be below 3% this year.

    Britain remains one of the best places in the world to live and do business: the rule of law; low taxes; a talented, creative, determined workforce; a strong finance sector.

    We have to build on the strengths of our economy, not turn away from them. We have to enhance our scientific leadership including our co-operation with other countries.

    These factors – a clear energy policy framework and a strong, investment-friendly economy – combine to make the UK an ideal place to attract energy investment.

    Whatever settlement we decide on in the comings months, these fundamentals will remain.

    At the heart of the approach I set out last autumn is our commitment to innovation in energy – and I am delighted this topic is top of your agenda today.

    We do not yet have all the answers to addressing climate change.

    We must nurture new technologies and industries that will make our future energy system both cheap and clean.

    In energy, we are leading the way.

    Last autumn as part of the Paris talks, Britain committed to Mission Innovation – a global partnership to encourage greater support for innovation. It was complemented by the Breakthrough Energy Coalition: 29 wealthy investors pledging to invest in energy research and development.

    I met Bill Gates earlier this year to discuss this and we agreed the need for a transformation of our energy system.

    We also agreed that the transformation would only happen if we could find technologies which are reliable, clean and cheap.

    We are doing our part. That is why, as a Government, we have committed more than £500 million over this Spending Review to supporting new energy technologies.

    This means supporting entrepreneurs as they look to develop the innovations of the future – in storage, in energy efficiency, in renewables.

    As part of that programme, we will build on the UK’s expertise in nuclear innovation. At least half of our innovation spending will go towards nuclear research and development. This will support our centres of excellence in Cumbria, Manchester, Sheffield and Preston.

    Our nuclear programme will include a competition to develop a small modular nuclear reactor – potentially one of the most exciting innovations in the energy sector.

    Let’s be honest, as the Chancellor said we now face a period of uncertainty. The decision on Thursday raises a host of questions for the energy sector, of course it does.

    There have been significant advantages to us trading energy both within Europe and being an entry point into Europe from the rest of the world. Europe has led the world on acting to address climate change.

    The economic imperative that drove those relationships has not changed, an openness to trade remains central to who we are as a country.

    As the Prime Minister said, we will work towards the best deal possible for Britain.

    Securing our energy supply, keeping bills low and building a low carbon energy infrastructure: the challenges remain the same.

    Our commitment also remains the same.

    As investors and businesses, you can be confident we remain committed to building a secure, affordable low carbon infrastructure fit for the 21st Century.

  • Amber Rudd – 2016 Speech on Energy Benefits of Staying in the UK

    amberrudd

    Below is the text of the speech made by Amber Rudd, the Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change, on 24 March 2016.

    Introduction

    I’m here today because on the 23rd of June, you will make a decision that will set the direction of the country for generations to come.

    A definitive, lasting choice that will impact upon the lives of our children and grandchildren.

    Are we stronger, safer, better off inside the European Union?

    I wholeheartedly believe that the answer to this question is a resounding yes.

    As the Energy Secretary, my first responsibility is to make sure that our families and businesses have the certainty of secure energy supplies that they can rely on…now and in the years ahead.

    Today I want to make the case for why being a member of the European Union helps to deliver that certainty.

    It’s actually pretty simple.

    It’s about safeguarding our national and economic security…

    It’s about lower costs for our households and businesses…

    It’s about creating jobs and investment which mean the security of a regular pay packet for working people…

    It’s about getting our voice heard and influencing action taken in response to the biggest global challenges we face.

    In short, I’m not willing to take the risk with our economic security.

    So why do I believe that energy is an important issue in this debate?

    Energy at the heart of the Union

    65 years ago, on 18 April 1951, a treaty was signed in Paris that created the European Coal and Steel Community.

    This was the first concrete step towards the EU we know today.

    This was born out of the ravages of two world wars.

    European co-operation began with an agreement on energy resources.

    To ensure we didn’t fight for them, but traded freely and fairly.

    And energy co-operation remains at the heart of the Union today.

    Whether it’s about making us collectively more energy secure, making energy cheaper, or dealing with the global issue of climate change.

    But more fundamentally, safe and secure energy supplies support everything we do in our day to day lives and everything we do as a country.

    When we turn on the light, switch the heating on, or plug in our phone to charge. We never think about that energy not being there.

    But it wasn’t always this way. I’m old enough to remember the power cuts of the 1970s. When Britain was the sick man of Europe.

    When I was growing up, we had candles and boxes of matches dotted around the house just in case.

    But because of the hard work of the British people, this is no longer the case.

    In fact, the UK is now ranked the fifth most energy secure nation in the world.

    But I also believe that our membership of the European Union has played its part in delivering this security.

    Let me tell you why.

    Security

    Here in Kent, I am reminded that whilst we are an island, we have very real and physical connections to Europe.

    We’re at the site of one of those connections today. The BritNed interconnector helps to provide the electricity we need.

    And over the next five years we intend to double our ability to import electricity with similar new connections to France, Belgium and Norway. And there are potential new projects with Denmark, Iceland and Ireland further down the track.

    These new connections alone could save British households nearly £12bn over the next two decades by driving down the price of electricity.

    They act as an extension lead to the vast European energy market, bringing cheap electricity from the continent.

    They are the perfect example of how being in Europe helps to deliver energy security at home.

    Britain’s geography means we are exposed.

    We are an island. It is potentially much harder for us to import and export electricity and gas.

    Of course, our North Sea reserves have helped to ensure UK energy security for decades.

    And, as the Chancellor’s budget last week demonstrated, we continue to support the industry in maximising the recovery of oil and gas.

    But reserves in the North Sea are declining.

    In 2015 we imported almost half of the gas we need to heat our homes and power our businesses. And two thirds of this imported gas comes through pipelines from the continent.

    By 2030, even if we develop the potential of UK shale gas, we are expected to import about three quarters of our gas.

    In other words, we will have to continue to work with our closest neighbours to deliver energy security in the future.

    Relying on energy from abroad is not without risk.

    We have seen how countries such as Putin’s Russia use their gas as a tool of foreign policy. Threatening to cut off supplies or drastically increase prices.

    We mustn’t let our energy security be hijacked as a political pawn to bring Europe to its knees.

    By working together in the European Union we can stop this becoming a reality.

    As a bloc of 500m people, we have the power to force Putin’s hand.

    We can coordinate our response to a crisis. We can use the power of the internal market to source gas from elsewhere. We can drive down the price of imports, as has happened recently in Eastern Europe.

    To put it plainly – when it comes to Russian gas, united we stand, divided we fall.

    However you look at it, an internal energy market helps to guarantee our energy security. Which is the bedrock of our economic security.

    I’m not willing to play fast and loose with either.

    Prices

    Let me turn to getting the best for our households and businesses.

    The European internal energy market is about making sure it is cheaper and easier for us to buy and sell energy.

    Without barriers – a level playing field.

    This is Britain’s agenda – trade and liberalisation to drive down prices – which has now been embraced by the rest of Europe.

    It was Britain that pushed to break up the monopolies on building cross-border cables, like the one we are at today, exposing them to proper competition that drives down costs and ensures real value for money.

    It has been estimated that a fully integrated internal energy market could save up to £50bn per year by 2030.

    Existing EU energy efficient product standards for items such as TVs, fridges and washing machines, will save UK households an average of £60 on their energy bills this year, rising to £120 a year by 2020.

    And that’s ignoring the benefits of new and tighter product standards in the future.

    That would mean lower bills not just for families and businesses across Europe, but right here in Britain.

    You might ask what’s the alternative? A question that those campaigning to leave seem unable or unwilling to answer.

    I’m clear that our energy security is non-negotiable so let me try again.

    Outside the EU, could we still benefit from these lower prices?

    Could we still set the rules that govern the internal market to ensure that they are in our interest?

    Could we still trade energy between ourselves and Europe without facing higher costs or barriers?

    Well, we don’t even know on what terms we could negotiate these important questions.

    How long it would take?

    How would the markets respond to the economic shock of Brexit?

    And those who want us to leave simply cannot tell you what a future outside the internal energy market would look like.

    And most importantly, they can’t or won’t tell you what the cost might be.

    But we can get an idea of what these costs might be.

    National Grid, which is responsible for running Britain’s electricity system, is neutral in this debate.

    It has assessed the risks and costs, because it will have to deal with whatever decision we make as a country.

    Today, it has published an independent report looking at what the consequences of leaving the EU could be.

    Either to become like Norway – inside the internal market but with no say over its shape.

    Or like Switzerland – who are outside the internal market and have been negotiating without success for almost a decade to try and get access on decent terms.

    The study contains some eye-catching numbers.

    The UK’s membership of the European Union helps keep our energy bills down. If we left the internal market, we’d get a massive electric shock because UK energy costs could rocket by at least half a billion pounds a year – the equivalent of peoples’ bills going up by around one and a half million pounds each and every day.

    People want and deserve lower energy bills, and we’re doing everything we can to make that happen, but leaving the EU could put all of that at risk and would hit the poorest in society the hardest.

    These are the hard facts from an independent body charged with operating our energy system.

    Even if we managed to negotiate to remain part of the internal market – on the lines of Norway – we would have to pay for access and have no say over the rules.

    This would be giving away power, not getting it back.

    I don’t know about you, but the prospect of being an EU rule taker, but not an EU rule maker, has no attraction whatsoever.

    Investment

    The report from National Grid also highlighted the impact of Brexit on investment and businesses in the energy sector.

    Their analysis showed the risk of several hundred million pounds of higher investment costs for UK energy infrastructure as a result of the uncertainty Brexit would bring.

    And this doesn’t include the impact on the UK’s energy sector due to the uncertainty about sterling in the event of a Brexit. This would likely increase the cost of importing electricity, gas, oil and energy equipment – all needlessly adding costs to UK energy.

    This isn’t just an energy issue. Almost half of all foreign investment in Britain comes from the EU.

    100,000 British businesses export to the EU. 3.3 million jobs are linked to trade with other EU countries.

    Yes, we are the 5th largest economy in the world – something we should be proud of – but our economy is stronger because we are in Europe.

    So is our ability to secure the investment we need in UK infrastructure to make sure it’s fit for the 21st Century. Being in the EU helps attract that investment.

    Just look at the record levels of investment in UK energy infrastructure.

    In 2014, direct investment in UK utility projects from elsewhere in the EU amounted to some £45bn.

    We win a third of all the EU’s renewable energy investment.

    And this investment creates jobs.

    There are around 12,000 companies in Britain working in the low carbon economy.

    £121bn of turnover. £44.9bn of value added to the UK economy.

    Take for example DONG energy from Denmark.

    They have invested £4bn so far helping to develop offshore wind in the UK. And they intend to spend a further £6bn in the years ahead.

    Investments that will create over 2000 jobs.

    Take Siemens.

    They employ almost 14,000 people in the UK and are currently investing over £300m in a new factory in Hull, creating up to 1,000 direct jobs.

    They certainly want us to stay in.

    Siemens’ Chief Executive has been pretty clear.

    “To me,” he told ITV, “this is not about surviving, it’s about thriving, it’s about growing and we’re very sure we can better grow our business in the UK as part of the European Union.”

    Being in the EU helps us attract billions and billions of pounds of investment in our energy system and supply chain. Taken together, this investment helps support 660,000 jobs in the UK’s energy sector. Does anybody really think all of that investment would continue if we left the EU, and with no extra cost? Why would we want to cause worry and hardship to hundreds of thousands of families in the UK who rely on our energy industry for their livelihoods? A stable regime gives investors confidence. For them unfettered access to the EU single market of 500m people can make the difference between being merely a going concern and a booming business.

    Leaving the EU would put all this investment at risk.

    The leave campaign cannot tell British businesses how long they would have to wait to re-negotiate the existing EU trade deals with over 50 other markets, not to mention missing out on those EU trade negotiations, like with the US and Japan, that are well under way.

    In the race for investment, why would we shoot ourselves in the foot by creating this uncertainty?

    Working people will ultimately pay the price for this with fewer jobs and higher prices.

    That is not a price I am willing to pay.

    Global Standing

    The final point I want to make is a personal one.

    Just like our membership of the UN Security Council, and NATO, remaining in the EU is about our standing in the world and the impact we can have on global issues as an individual nation.

    With Putin on the prowl and Daesh sharpening their swords, our unity and our shared values – of free speech, democracy and equality – are more important than ever.

    Beyond these immediate dangers, there are longer term challenges that require us to work together to resolve.

    Take the recent climate change conference in Paris where 200 countries came together to sign the first global climate deal ever agreed.

    I was there. I saw first-hand how the EU played a pivotal role in driving this deal through.

    The deal was ultimately negotiated between the world’s biggest economic powers: the US, China and the EU.

    And it was UK representatives who were leading negotiations on behalf of the EU.

    If we left the EU, with the UK responsible for just 1% of global emissions, I doubt we would have even been in the room.

    How do I know? Because I was there in the room, and many others weren’t.

    The global deal in Paris is in the UK’s interests, and frankly we wouldn’t have got it without being part of the EU.

    I firmly believe that from our position in the EU we can influence the great geopolitical challenges of the day – to make the world a safer place for Britain.

    And let’s be clear, the deal in Paris is not just about our national security, it’s also about our economic security.

    Those who want us to leave have a tendency to argue that tackling climate change hampers our economic competitiveness.

    I disagree.

    It is our own domestic law – the Climate Change Act – that sets out obligations to the next generation.

    Our own system – the UK’s Carbon Budgets – sets the pace.

    We are also not the only ones taking action.

    The Paris Agreement was about levelling the playing field between us and the rest of the world. Making sure that every country makes its fair share of effort to combat climate change.

    And within the EU, we are at the table, shaping climate policies so they work for British businesses.

    And so they are focused on cutting carbon in a cost effective way. Not driven by backward looking renewables targets.

    And by having a seat at the table we are reforming the EU itself.

    Since we re-entered Government in 2010, we have led the way on convincing other countries that binding renewables targets aren’t effective.

    This kind of reform was at the heart of the Prime Minister’s renegotiation.

    Getting a new deal for Britain. But remaining a member of the EU so we can continue to have a seat at the table to set the rules, and effect change at a global level.

    In other words, the best of both worlds.

    Conclusion

    Today I have laid out my case for why I believe we should remain in the European Union.

    I firmly believe that we will be stronger, safer and better off as a member of the EU than we would be out on our own.

    Our businesses will be better off because they have full access to the free trade single market, bringing jobs, investment and financial security.

    Our families will benefit from lower households bills.

    Our children will grow up in a safer, more secure world, as we play a leading role in one of the world’s largest organisations from within. Helping make the decisions that affect them.

    Those who would have us leave can’t even provide a plan for what happens next.

    They are offering risk at a time of uncertainty. A leap into the dark.

    For me, having to risk paying a Brexit premium to keep the lights on doesn’t feel like “stepping into the light’.

    It’s clear to me that the alternatives won’t work for Britain.

    Paying all the costs, but making none of the decisions that set the rules of the game.

    Paying more to guarantee our economic security, whilst losing out on business opportunities, exports and jobs.

    So I ask, why cut ourselves off?

    Of course, the EU isn’t perfect. We have to continue to reform it to make sure that we are getting the best deal for the UK.

    But I don’t believe we should make the best the enemy of the good.

    I don’t want this country to just be on the fringes.

    I want us to be at the centre of things, making things happen, leading in Europe and getting the best for our people.

    My judgement is clear.

    In the EU, our future is stronger and more secure, and our families and businesses are better off.

    My answer is this.

    We choose in. We remain. We stay.

  • Amber Rudd – 2015 Statement on Energy Investment

    amberrudd

    Below is the text of the speech made by Amber Rudd, the Secretary of State for Energy, on 21 October 2015.

    EDF and its Chinese partner China General Nuclear Corporation (CGN) have committed to Hinkley Point C during this week’s landmark China State Visit, confirming that Somerset will have the first new nuclear power station in the UK for a generation.

    The companies have signed a Strategic Investment Agreement which marks a critical moment for the site in Somerset. EDF has confirmed it will take a 66.5 per cent stake in Hinkley with CGN taking 33.5 per cent, demonstrating a clear commitment from both parties.

    The Government and EDF have finalised the detail of the Contract for Difference which offers increased price certainty for the electricity produced from Hinkley Point C. The Funded Decommissioning Programme will make sure that the tax payer doesn’t pick up the cost of decommissioning the plant in the future.

    Hinkley Point C will provide low carbon electricity to six million homes, twice as many as the whole of London, for around 60 years – and consumers won’t pay a penny until the plant is up and running. It will provide a vital boost for the national and local economy – creating 25,000 jobs, with at least 5,000 people from Somerset expected to work directly on the project, providing a £40 million boost to the local economy every year. The Energy Secretary will take her final decision on the Contract for Difference when EDF and GNI have signed the full investment documentation.

    A Departmental Minute will be presented to Parliament today regarding the scale of the financial commitment associated with the CfD and the potential liabilities to arise in relation to those Waste Transfer Contracts (WTC). I judge the likelihood of these potential WTC liabilities arising to be very low.

  • Amber Rudd – 2015 Speech to RenewablesUK Offshore Wind Conference

    amberrudd

    Below is the text of the speech made by Amber Rudd, the Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change, on 24 June 2015.

    Introduction

    Ladies and Gentlemen, I want to start by taking you back 15 years to the year 2000, the first year of the new millennium.

    It was the year the Spice Girls broke up. The year Chris Evans stopped making TFI Friday. It was the year we partied to see in the millennium.

    But what is the significance of this milestone year for us today?

    The offshore wind success story

    Well it’s this.

    At the turn of the century, do you know how much UK electricity offshore wind was providing?

    None. None what so ever.

    Then, at the end of 2000, off the coast of Northumberland, the Blyth pilot project got up and running.

    The UK’s first offshore wind farm. With just two turbines, the largest turbines in the world at the time, producing just 4MW of electricity.

    And from small seeds, orchards grow.

    The last 15 years has seen a phenomenal growth in British offshore wind.

    By the end of this year we are expecting 30 offshore wind farm developments to be contributing to Britain’s energy security.

    Almost 1,500 turbines with the capacity to provide over 5GW of home produced, clean electricity – enough to power the equivalent of almost 4 million homes.

    In the last 5 years alone, the amount of electricity being produced from offshore wind has more than quadrupled.

    In the same period we have seen around £10bn of private sector investment.

    And the industry now supports around 14,000 jobs.

    So you represent one of the 21st century industrial success stories.

    You – we – are world leaders.

    Pioneers. Innovators. The best business minds working with the best engineers, within one of the world’s strongest policy and financial frameworks.

    And working together we now have the most operational offshore wind here in UK waters than anywhere else in the world.

    And that is where 21st century industrial Britain should be – leading the world.

    As our friends over at the Department for Business would say – Britain is Great.

    So today I want to talk about how we build on that success.

    First – deployment and investment – keeping up the pace we have set to maintain our world leading status.

    Second – costs – bringing them down so offshore wind becomes more and more competitive, requiring less and less public support, so the future is sustainable and subsidy free.

    And third – economic benefit – making sure that this success delivers economic benefits throughout the UK – into local host communities, through the supply chain to the wider country.

    But first, let me remind you all why we are doing all this.

    Energy security, global security

    Britain is upgrading its energy infrastructure.

    To replace power stations reaching the end of their natural lives and to replace them with a more diverse, more secure, lower carbon mix.

    The aim is to keep the lights on, and decarbonise on the most cost effective trajectory possible, supporting a diverse mix of low carbon energy.

    Keeping the lights on is non-negotiable. Our modern technological society cannot function without power. And a diverse mix provides the most resilient system.

    Tackling climate change is also non-negotiable.

    The very things that make the British Isles the right place to exploit offshore renewables; makes us vulnerable to climate change too.

    Surrounded on all sides by the sea, with an advanced, open, trade-based economy.

    The physical manifestations of climate change in the future – such as increased flooding – and the economic manifestations – such as resource shortages, and trade wars – both will hit us and hit us increasingly hard if we don’t limit climate change.

    Going for clean energy isn’t fluffy or indulgent: it makes cold, hard economic sense.

    And it makes cold hard business sense: clean energy is a boom market – bringing jobs and investment and growth.

    But it won’t make economic sense if we break the bank doing it – or lose the support of the public.

    That is why it is imperative we control the costs of decarbonisation and limit the impact on people’s bills.

    Decarbonisation must be affordable, sensitive to the impact it has on people’s pockets, sensitive to wider economic circumstances, and sensitive to the local communities where infrastructure is built.

    We have a long term plan, underpinned by carbon budgets, to meet our responsibilities. It’s all set out in the Climate Change Act.

    And this Government is committed to helping see it through.

    We have a plan for Electricity Market Reform, set under the last Government, that will help the cost effective decarbonisation of the power sector, attracting the private sector investment we need.

    That is of course underpinned by the Levy Control Framework that trebled the support available for low-carbon technology.

    That pot is supporting a mixture of low-carbon technologies because both decarbonisation and energy security is best achieved through a diverse energy mix – not over-reliance on one technology or source.

    And the EMR delivery plan sets out what we expect that mix to include by 2020 to meet our objective of generating 30% of electricity from renewables.

    We already have enough onshore wind in the pipeline to hit the middle of the range we need for that technology.

    Without action we are likely to deploy beyond this range.

    We could end up with more onshore wind projects than we can afford, which would lead to either higher bills for consumers, or other renewable technologies, such as offshore wind, losing out on support.

    We need to continue investing in less mature technologies so that they realise their promise, just as onshore wind has done.

    It is therefore appropriate to curtail further subsidised deployment of onshore wind, balancing the interests of onshore developers with those of bill payers, and developers of other technologies.

    So what is the plan for the future deployment of offshore wind?

    Deployment and investment

    The EMR Delivery plan set out a range of 8-15GW reflecting technology and cost uncertainties at the time of publication.

    We expect to see around 10GW by 2020, much more than any country in the world.

    And we are achieving real progress towards that.

    Just last week we saw the opening of Gwynt-y-Mor, the second largest operating offshore wind farm in the world.

    A £2bn project built by RWE, with the capacity to produce enough electricity to power the equivalent of around 400,000 homes.

    Vattenfall’s Kentish Flats Extension will deliver an extra 15 turbines, capable of generating enough electricity to power the equivalent of 35,000 homes.

    And DONG’s Westermost Rough also opens next week, the first windfarm anywhere to use the next generation 6MW turbine on a large scale.

    The UK already has over 5GW operational.

    Over 4GW has already secured support through Contracts for Difference.

    And there is a strong pipeline for possible future projects.

    All this means I am confident that we will double installed capacity in the next 5 years.

    I know that for the sector to grow, developers and supply chain and investors need as much predictability as possible.

    That is why Contracts for Difference were introduced.

    The last CfD auction round was a great success for offshore wind with – East Anglia ONE and Neart na Gaoithe both securing contracts.

    As you would expect, I am considering plans for the next CFD round and will set those out in due course.

    I am determined that our low-carbon future remains on a stable long-term footing and therefore I am determined to ensure that the financial support is sustainable before proceeding.

    Let us be clear. You and I know there is no bottomless pit of bill payer support for low carbon.

    We have a responsibility to keep costs to consumers down.

    Because only by keeping costs down will we maintain public support for the action we are taking to bring down carbon emissions and combat climate change.

    And that means two things:

    First, Government support must help technologies eventually stand on their own two feet, not to encourage a permanent reliance on subsidy. Cost must come down, subsidies must be progressively reduced.

    Second, the public, and particularly host communities, must see the benefits of the moral and financial support they are providing the industry.

    This means that the commitments being made, on community benefits and on UK jobs and UK content in supply chain plans, must be met.

    Cost reduction

    Our decision to proceed with a major expansion of offshore wind in this decade is based on a strategy of investing early in emerging low carbon technologies where the UK has real potential.

    But these levels of subsidy cannot be sustained indefinitely, particularly if we foresee further deployment in the 2020s.

    It is provided now explicitly in order to enable industry to drive down costs, invest and innovate so that offshore wind is well positioned to expand in the 2020s and beyond.

    That expansion must be on the basis of rapidly reducing costs.

    I am very pleased that the industry has been straining every sinew to meet this challenge.

    The Cost Reduction Monitoring Framework shows that costs have already fallen by over 10% since 2011, and more quickly than expected.

    Reaching £100 per megawatt hour is definitely achievable in the near future.

    Every pound saved puts offshore wind in a strong position to contribute even further to our decarbonisation objectives in the next decade.

    And every pound that is spent within the UK economy – creating jobs, strengthening the supply chain – provides added incentive for the Government and the public to back offshore wind.

    Economic benefit

    Home grown capacity is growing.

    Siemens blade factory in Hull, 1000 jobs.

    Mitsubishi Vestas Offshore Wind blade factory on the Isle of Wight, 200 jobs

    Offshore Structures (Britain)’s foundations factory in Teesside, up to 350 jobs.

    These are real and positive signs of an industry maturing and delivering real benefits to UK communities – regenerating, rejuvenating, reskilling.

    Just after I have finished my speech I understand that Dong Energy will be signing an agreement with JDR Cable Systems for inter array cable supply.

    I am not the first Secretary of State to celebrate in JDR winning a contract, but I am delighted they continue to be a successful example of the quality and cost which UK based companies can deliver.

    And we want to see this development of the UK manufacturing base continue. In particular, we want to see investment into priority areas like towers, jackets and cables.

    We have high expectations for the delivery of UK content targets in supply chain plans.

    I welcome Scottish Power Renewables’ intention to deliver at least 50% UK content for their East Anglia ONE project.

    And as the UK industry develops, the opportunity to export goods and skills grows too.

    In 2013/14, the UK Government supported less than a million pounds worth of UK exports in offshore wind.

    Last year that had leapt to £90m.

    The UK may be the No.1 country for offshore wind deployment, but we are not alone in this journey.

    Overseas markets are becoming increasingly attractive.

    Experienced British companies are highly sought after.

    Outside the UK, over 15GW of offshore wind projects are likely to be operating in Europe by 2020.

    This represents a huge commercial opportunity on our doorstep.

    £40bn in component supply and construction contracts will be made available through competitive tender procedures.

    My Department and I are determined to back you.

    And our colleagues at UKTI are geared up to help UK companies bid successfully. So I urge UK companies to check out their new ‘Passport to Europe’ guide so you can access the Government support available to help you export successfully.

    And the opportunity is not just European, it is global.

    The Chinese market is potentially huge.

    Last year the Government supported £12m in offshore wind exports to China.

    And we expect that to grow significantly.

    Conclusion

    So ladies and gentlemen, this is the challenge.

    To maintain the UK’s leading position.

    To reduce costs so support can go further, and offshore wind can begin to compete on a more level playing field, cementing its long-term future in the energy mix.

    To spread the economic benefits ashore through the supply chain, continuing to build home-grown capability and resource.

    And to project this success outward into the growing global market.

    Offshore wind is a significant economic opportunity for the UK.

    But it is also an essential part of our plans for delivering energy security and decarbonisation.

    And as we approach the climate change talks in Paris later this year, thanks to you, the UK’s offshore wind success will be a feather I can wear proudly in my cap.

  • Amber Rudd – 2015 Speech on UK Energy Policy

    amberrudd

    Below is the text of the speech made by Amber Rudd, the Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change, at the Institute of Civil Engineers in London on 18 November 2015.

    Introduction

    There’s a picture from the Government art collection that hangs in the Department of Energy and Climate Change. It’s called “At the Coal Face” by Nicholas Evans.

    Rendered in black and white, it shows a pair of miners with shovels and picks, muscles straining as they work at a seam. It’s a very powerful picture.

    For me as Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change, it’s a constant reminder that the efforts made to heat and light our homes; to power our businesses and economy; are, and have always been, a very human endeavour. Our energy system is a miracle of human ingenuity, industry and innovation.

    Many decades of engineering brilliance and hard, often dangerous work has produced a system which takes the natural raw material of coal and gas and oil (and now the wind and sun) and moulds them into something that powers our lives.

    Most of us take energy for granted. The lights come on when we want them to and that’s exactly as it should be.

    No government should ever take a risk on security, whether it be keeping our citizens safe or building a more resilient economy.

    This Government is focussed on securing a better future for Britain.

    And that includes energy security.

    Our modern society simply cannot function without power.

    Energy security has to be the number one priority.

    But no responsible government should take a risk on climate change either.

    Because it’s one of the greatest long-term threats to our economic security.

    So the challenge we face is how we make sure that energy remains as the backbone of our economy, while we transform to a low carbon system.

    How do we achieve an energy system that is secure; affordable; and clean?

    Energy Policy in Context

    That picture, ‘At the Coal Face’, is also a historical record.

    Drawn in 1978, the year of the winter of discontent, the decade of the ‘three day week’, for me, it conjures up a Britain from a wholly different age.

    Since then Britain’s energy system has been shaped in two distinct phases.

    The first of these was the break-up of the large nationalised energy monopolies set in train by Nigel Lawson.

    Competition

    In his seminal speech in 1982, he defined the Government’s role as setting a framework that would ensure the market, rather than the state, provided secure, cost-efficient energy.

    This was driven by a desire to create a system where competition worked for families and businesses.

    “The changes in prospect,” said Lawson at the time, “will help us ensure that the supplies of fuel we need are available at the lowest practicable cost.”

    Allowing markets to flourish. Open to trading. Independent regulation to provide confidence to investors. Competition keeping prices as low as possible.

    Of course, the market that was created was not free from all government intervention. Markets never are.

    Intervention was necessary then and will always remain so in an industry that delivers such a vital service.

    But intervention was limited.

    Intervention

    The second phase of modern energy policy began when Tony Blair signed the Renewable Energy Target in 2007.

    What has this left us with?

    We now have an electricity system where no form of power generation, not even gas-fired power stations, can be built without government intervention.

    And a legacy of ageing, often unreliable plant.

    Perversely, even with the huge growth in renewables, our dependence on coal, the dirtiest fossil fuel, hasn’t been reduced.

    Indeed a higher proportion of our electricity came from coal in 2014 than in 1999.

    So we still haven’t found the right balance.

    We need a course correction using the tools we have already developed through Electricity Market Reform.

    We know competition works. It keeps costs low and can deliver a clean and reliable energy system.

    We want a consumer-led, competition focussed energy system that has energy security at the heart of it and delivers for families and businesses.

    We want to see a competitive electricity market, with government out of the way as much as possible, by 2025.

    Getting there will not be easy. The process of privatisation itself spanned five Parliaments.

    Indeed, moving to a new model without risking energy security will require government to continue to intervene. But that should diminish over time.

    We need to start that work now.

    So how do we do that?

    Energy Security

    It may sound a strange thing to say, but fundamentally, I want energy policy to be boring.

    One that people going about their daily lives don’t need to worry about, because they trust that the system produces energy that is reliable and affordable and, indeed, isn’t damaging to the environment.

    Frankly, if at all possible, energy policy shouldn’t be noticed.

    That is why energy security has to be the first priority – it is fundamental to the health of our economy and the lives of our people.

    It underpins everything we need to do.

    Gas

    In some areas the system works well.

    The gas used to heat our homes is amongst the cheapest and most secure in Europe.

    And this is despite the decline in our domestic gas production from the North Sea.

    How has this been achieved?

    Investors, driven by a desire to make a profit, have built new LNG terminals and pipelines that have improved diversity of supply.

    In this case, energy security has been best served by government staying out of the way and allowing markets to find an answer.

    Of course we can’t be complacent. We currently import around half of our gas needs, but by 2030 that could be as high as 75%.

    That’s why we’re encouraging investment in our shale gas exploration so we can add new sources of home-grown supply to our real diversity of imports.

    There are also economic benefits in building a new industry for the country and for communities.

    Our North Sea history means the UK is a home to world class oil and gas expertise, in Aberdeen and around the UK – we should build on that base so that our shale potential can be exploited safely.

    Electricity

    But in the supply of electricity, with falling margins, there’s a greater challenge.

    I am confident the steps we’ve taken alongside National Grid and Ofgem will ensure the security of supply in the next few years.

    But, frankly, it cannot be satisfactory for an advanced economy like the UK to be relying on polluting, carbon intensive 50-year-old coal-fired power stations.

    Let me be clear: this is not the future.

    We need to build a new energy infrastructure, fit for the 21st century.

    Much of that is already in the pipeline – new gas, such as the plant at Carrington, and of course, a large increase in renewables over the next five years and in the longer-term, new nuclear.

    At the same time, we are building new interconnectors to make it easier to import cheaper electricity from Europe.

    These changes are vital. Cheaper energy means lower household bills – something which matters to all of us.

    But this isn’t just about making savings.

    It’s about the long term security of our energy supply.

    And my view is that is best served through open, competitive markets.

    That is why the Prime Minister has been calling for an ambitious Energy Union for Europe – to save hardworking families money and to guarantee energy supplies for future generations.

    So we welcome the report out from the EU today on the “State of the Energy Union” which lays out the steps Europe needs to take to strengthen our partnership.

    And I can say to Europe that Britain stands ready to help make this vision a reality.

    This is an example of where we can achieve more working together than alone, and where Europe can adapt to help its citizens where it matters to them.

    But we do need to do more at home.

    In the next 10 years, it’s imperative that we get new gas-fired power stations built.

    We need to get the right signals in the electricity market to achieve that.

    We are already consulting on how to improve the Capacity Market.

    And after this year’s auction we will take stock and ensure it delivers the gas we need.

    Nuclear

    Gas is central to our energy secure future.

    So is nuclear.

    Opponents of nuclear misread the science. It is safe and reliable.

    The challenge, as with other low carbon technologies, is to deliver nuclear power which is low cost as well. Green energy must be cheap energy.

    But innovation is not just about trying things out in a lab and magically discovering a new energy source.

    It is also about testing things at scale.

    We learn from doing.

    In the 13 years of the last Labour government not a single new nuclear power station was commissioned.

    We are dealing with a legacy of under-investment and with Hinkley Point C planning to start generating in the mid 2020s that is already changing.

    It is imperative we do not make the mistakes of the past and just build one nuclear power station.

    There are plans for a new fleet of nuclear power stations, including at Wylfa and Moorside.

    This could provide up to 30% of the low carbon electricity which we’re likely to need through the 2030s and create 30,000 new jobs.

    This will provide low carbon electricity at the scale we need.

    Climate change is a big problem, it needs big technologies.

    As the former Chief Scientist at DECC, David Mackay, said: “If everyone does a little, we’ll achieve only a little. We must do a lot. What’s required are big changes.”

    Offshore Wind

    That’s why we should also support the growth of our world leading offshore wind industry.

    In the global context this is a technology which has the scale to make a big difference.

    It is one area where the UK can help make a lasting technological contribution.

    On current plans we expect to see 10GW of offshore wind installed by 2020.

    This is supporting a growing installation, development and blade manufacturing industry. Around 14,000 people are employed in the sector.

    This ground breaking expertise has helped the costs of contracts for offshore wind come down by at least 20% in the last two years.

    But it is still too expensive.

    So our approach will be different – we will not support offshore wind at any cost.

    Further support will be strictly conditional on the cost reductions we have seen already accelerating.

    The technology needs to move quickly to cost-competitiveness.

    If that happens we could support up to 10GW of new offshore wind projects in the 2020s.

    The industry tells us they can meet that challenge, and we will hold them to it.

    If they don’t there will be no subsidy.

    No more blank cheques.

    Today I can announce that – if, and only if, the Government’s conditions on cost reduction are met – we will make funding available for three auctions in this Parliament.

    We intend to hold the first of these auctions by the end of 2016.

    Investors have a right to clarity on our objectives. And that is what I am providing today.

    New nuclear, new gas and, if costs, come down, new offshore wind will all help us meet the challenge of decarbonisation.

    The Purpose of Decarbonisation

    But is important to pause and answer this question: ‘what are we decarbonising for?’

    Climate action is about our future economic security.

    As the Foreign Secretary said last week: “In every other facet of life, we assess the risks and where the risk of occurrence is high and the impacts are potentially catastrophic, we act to mitigate and to prevent. Our approach to climate change should be no different.”

    Action on climate change is linked to the action we’re taking now to reduce the deficit. It is about resilience now and in the future.

    But climate change is a global problem, not a local one.

    Action by one state will not solve the problem. It’s what we do together that counts.

    And that is why achieving a global deal in Paris next month is so important.

    A Global Deal

    Paris is a city that is currently in mourning.

    But in a less than two weeks’ time, we will see the leaders of the world gather there in solidarity to seek to achieve the first truly global deal on climate change.

    Since I became Secretary of State I have been working with my counterparts in India, China, the US, Europe and others across the globe to help make sure we come to Paris in the best place possible.

    The commitments countries have made so far are significant and a deal is tantalisingly close.

    This much I know, climate change will not be solved by a group of over-tired politicians and negotiators in a conference centre.

    It will take action by businesses, civil society, cities, regions and countries.

    Paris must deliver a clear signal that the future is low carbon that unleashes the levels of private investment and local action needed.

    Collective action works when you share the burden fairly, but also when each makes a distinctive contribution. We know that in isolation, cuts to Britain’s own greenhouse gas emissions, just 1.2% of the global total, would do little to limit climate change.

    So we have to ask ourselves the important question:

    What is the UK’s role in that global decarbonisation? Where can we make a difference?

    Controlling Costs

    Our most important task is providing a compelling example to the rest of the world of how to cut carbon while controlling costs.

    As I set out earlier, it is not clear we have done that so far.

    The Climate Change Act, which the Conservatives helped create, is a good model that is being copied by other countries

    Long-term time-tables, regular budgets, independent review.

    We are committed to meeting the UK’s 2050 target.

    We are on track for our next two carbon budgets.

    But it’s clear, as the Committee on Climate Change has said, that the fourth carbon budget is going to be tough to achieve.

    We do need to meet that challenge, but we need be pragmatic too.

    We will need action right across the economy: in transport; waste and buildings.

    And we’ll be setting out our plans for meeting the fourth and fifth Carbon Budgets next year.

    But simply meeting the targets we have set ourselves will not be example enough for the rest of the world to follow.

    We need to get the right balance between supporting new technologies and being tough on subsidies to keep bills as low as possible.

    We can only expect bill payers to support low carbon power, as long as costs are controlled.

    I inherited a department where policy costs on bills had spiralled.

    Subsidy should be temporary, not part of a permanent business model.

    Most importantly, new, clean technologies will only be sustainable at the scale we need if they are cheap enough. When costs come down, as they have in onshore wind and solar, so should support.

    For instance, we have enough onshore wind in the pipeline to meet our 2020 expectations.

    That is why we set out in our manifesto that we would end any new public subsidy for onshore wind farms. The costs of solar have come down too.

    Over 8GW of solar is already deployed and even with the costs controls we have proposed we expect to have around 12GW in place by 2020.

    These technologies will be cost-competitive through the 2020s.

    We need to work towards a market where success is driven by your ability to compete in a market. Not by your ability to lobby Government.

    This will only be possible if carbon pricing works properly.

    Despite its flaws, the EU Emissions Trading Scheme is exactly the kind of intervention that should be made at a European level where collective action is more powerful.

    The UK has worked hard with others to get major reforms that are helping restore a more stable and robust price on carbon.

    But I’m determined that we help deliver more this Parliament to restore the ETS to full health.

    In the same way generators should pay the cost of pollution, we also want intermittent generators to be responsible for the pressures they add to the system when the wind does not blow or the sun does not shine.

    Only when different technologies face their full costs can we achieve a more competitive market.

    Coal

    To set an example to the rest of the world, the UK also has to focus on where we can get the biggest carbon cuts, swiftly and cheaply.

    That is hard to do when, after 20 years of action on climate change, 30% of our electricity still comes from unabated coal.

    One of the greatest and most cost-effective contributions we can make to emission reductions in electricity is by replacing coal fired power stations with gas.

    For centuries coal has played a central role in our energy system.

    But it’s the most carbon intensive fossil fuel and damages air quality.

    Gas produces half the carbon emissions of coal when used for power generation.

    Unabated coal is simply not sustainable in the longer term.

    In an ideal world, the carbon price provided by the ETS would phase out coal for us using market signals. But it’s not there yet.

    So I want to take action now.

    I am pleased to announce that we will be launching a consultation in the spring on when to close all unabated coal-fired power stations.

    Our consultation will set out proposals to close coal by 2025 – and restrict its use from 2023.

    If we take this step, we will be one of the first developed countries to deliver on a commitment to take coal off the system.

    But let me be clear, we’ll only proceed if we’re confident that the shift to new gas can be achieved within these timescales.

    Innovation

    Let’s be honest with ourselves, we don’t have all the answers to decarbonisation today.

    We must develop technologies that are both cheap and green.

    This means unleashing innovation.

    Innovation is not just about investing money in new bits of kit.

    Government’s first job is to create the environment for new ideas to flourish by getting rid of the barriers that in the way. Some argue we should adapt our traditional model dominated by large power stations and go for a new, decentralised, flexible approach.

    Locally-generated energy supported by storage, interconnection and demand response, offers the possibility of a radically different model.

    It is not necessarily the job of Government to choose one of these models.

    Government is the enabler. The market will reveal which one works and how much we need of both

    A Smarter System

    Smart meters are a key building block of an approach that could allow that.

    Every home and small business in Britain will get them by the end of 2020.

    And this is sparking some real entrepreneurial innovation.

    Devices providing real-time feedback and apps are being developed that will help people work out where they are wasting energy.

    This isn’t about technology for technology’s sake – it’s about using it to keep people’s bills low – and making the overall system more efficient.

    A fully smart energy system could help us to reduce costs by tens of billions of pounds over the decades ahead. So are now working with Ofgem to assess what we can do.

    For instance, I already have agreed with Ofgem that by early 2017 they will remove the barriers to suppliers choosing half-hourly settlement for household customers.

    This will allow suppliers to offer new Time of Use tariffs so people can get a cheaper deal based on when they use energy, not necessarily how much.

    We are also looking at removing other regulations that are holding back smart solutions, such as demand side response and storage.

    I will shortly be launching a paper setting out some of the possibilities and we will consult formally in the spring to allow action in the autumn.

    Independent Regulation

    National Grid as system operator has played a pivotal role in keeping the energy market working.

    But as our system changes we need to make sure it is as productive, secure and cost-effective as possible.

    There is a strong case for greater independence for the system operator to allow it to make the necessary changes.

    So, alongside the National Infrastructure Commission, we will work with National Grid, Ofgem and others to consider how to reform the current system operator model to make it more flexible and independent.

    Independent regulation is central to a competitive market.

    It’s right that Ofgem is an independent voice championing competition and cracking down when companies have treated customers badly.

    That is also why we are creating the independent Oil and Gas Authority.

    The North Sea still offers significant value for the UK – up to 20 billion barrels of oil equivalent could still be extracted and the industry supports 375,000 jobs.

    But we need to provide clarity to investors in UK oil production

    Today I am launching a consultation on a Strategy to Maximise the Economic Recovery of the North Sea.

    The principle objectives this Strategy is designed to meet have been challenged and amended in the Energy Bill by the House of Lords.

    We intend to overturn this amendment when the Bill is considered in the Commons.

    Innovation in Supply

    This system of independent regulation, alongside some of the changes we made in the last Parliament, creates the conditions for competition and innovation to flourish.

    This has led to greater competition in the supply market.

    There are now 26 independent suppliers and their market share has grown from under 1% in 2010 to over 13% now. And the Big 6 are losing market share every quarter.

    Innovative, new suppliers, which range from start-ups to local authorities, are demonstrating how competition is working for people.

    But the market is still far from perfect which is why the Competition and Markets Authority is undertaking the biggest investigation into the energy market since privatisation.

    Its interim findings were not pretty for the large energy suppliers.

    It remains frustrating to me that the falls in wholesale gas prices have not been passed on to most households.
    This has to change.

    It is also not clear that all business customers are benefiting from competition in a market that lacks transparency. The CMA shouldn’t duck these issues.

    Heat

    Nowhere in the energy system is the need for innovation more acute than in how we use heat to keep warm in our homes and for industrial processes.

    Heat accounts for around 45% of our energy consumption and a third of all carbon emissions.

    Progress to date has been slower here than in other parts of our economy.

    There are technologies which have great potential, such as district heating, biogas, hydrogen and heat pumps. But it is not yet clear which will work at scale.

    So different approaches need to be tested.

    We need a long-term plan that will work and keeps down costs for consumers.

    We will set out our approach next year, as part of our strategy to meet our carbon budgets.

    Energy Efficiency

    Of course, one of the best ways to cut bills and cut carbon is to cut energy use itself.

    That’s why energy efficiency is so important.

    For businesses, energy efficiency can reduce costs, which in turn improves productivity and competitiveness.

    But the tax and policy framework designed to encourage this is complex and we are now looking at streamlining it.

    More than 1.2 million households are seeing lower bills due to energy efficiency improvements over the last 5 years.

    We are committed to ensuring a million more get the same benefits by the end of this Parliament.

    But I am determined that help through the Energy Company Obligation is concentrated on those in greatest need.

    They are the ones who live in damp and draughty homes, and they who need the most help to cut their bills.

    Research and Development

    So as I have said, we need to reinvigorate competition, make markets work for consumers, and build a smarter system.

    Important as these steps are, they are not enough to unleash the innovation we need.

    New technologies at the scale we need don’t appear out of thin air.

    Nuclear power, gas-fired power stations and even shale gas emerged after years, sometimes decades of public support.

    It takes the brilliance of business to commercialise them, but it often takes the patience of Government support to get them off the ground.

    Energy research and development has been neglected in recent years in favour of the mass deployment of all renewable technologies.

    We do not think this is right.

    We cannot support every technology.

    Our intervention has to be limited to where we can really make a difference – where the technology has the potential to scale up and to compete in a global market without subsidy.

    DECC funding for innovation is already supporting the development of transformative technologies here in the UK. In energy storage, in low carbon transport fuels, in more efficient lighting.

    These and many more examples, such as CCS, point to the creation of new industries and new jobs in the UK.

    We must also build on our rich nuclear heritage and become a centre for global nuclear innovation.

    This means exploiting our world leading technical expertise at centres of excellence at universities in Manchester, Sheffield and Lancaster.

    It also means exploring new opportunities like Small Modular Reactors, which hold the promise of low cost, low carbon energy.

    Conclusion

    So ladies and gentlemen, this is the way forward:

    Greater competition.

    Tough on subsidies.

    Concentrating on technologies that will deliver at scale.

    New gas replacing coal.

    Getting new nuclear off the ground.

    Reducing the costs of offshore wind.

    And unleashing innovation to discover the clean and cheap technologies of tomorrow.

    Government should enable, not dictate.

    The market should lead our choices.

    Because that is the way to keep costs as low as possible.

    By 2025, with a new nuclear power station built, offshore wind competing with other renewables, unabated coal a thing of the past, and smart energy coming into its own we will have transformed our energy system.

    But we must remind ourselves why we are doing any of this.

    Energy security provides the foundation of our future economic success. It is the top priority.

    Secure energy so people can get on with their lives.

    Affordable energy so the people that foot the bill, the households and businesses of Britain, get a good deal.

    And clean energy to safeguard our future economic security.

  • Amber Rudd – 2015 Speech on Climate Change

    amberrudd

    Below is the text of the speech made by Amber Rudd, the Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change, to the Aviva Conference on 24 July 2015.

    Introduction

    Thank you Mark [WILSON – AVIVA CEO].

    I’m really pleased to be here with you at Aviva. And talking about climate change.

    The insurance industry deals in risk. It’s your stock in trade.

    You were one of first business sectors to really think about what climate change could mean for the people of the UK.

    And one of the first to argue unequivocally for action.

    Why?

    Because you have recognised that unchecked climate change is one of the greatest long-term economic risks this country faces.

    Famously, the Stern report estimated that climate change could mean losing at least 5% of global GDP – and left unchecked that could rise substantially.

    But the climate change risk assessment commissioned by the Foreign Office, and published last week by the University of Cambridge, concludes that, if anything, we have tended to underestimate the economic risk.

    The Economist Intelligence Unit report you are publishing today highlights the significant financial losses that could be faced.

    It is no surprise therefore, that the Bank of England has been taking climate change very seriously indeed.

    Their ‘One Bank’ research agenda recognises the significant effects that climate change could have on financial markets and institutions in years to come.

    Economic Security

    We are committed to taking action on climate change and we are clear that our long-term economic plan goes hand in hand with a long-term plan for climate action.

    Climate action is about security, plain and simple – economic security.

    If we don’t act, it will become increasingly hard to maintain our prosperity, protect our people and conserve our countryside.

    The economic impact of unchecked climate change would be profound.

    Lower growth, higher prices, a lower quality of life – not to mention many properties and businesses at higher risk from flooding and extreme weather.

    So I see climate action as a vital safety net for our families and businesses.

    Protecting our homes, our livelihoods, our prosperity.

    It is the ultimate insurance policy.

    That is why we are committed to meeting our climate change targets.

    And if we act in the right way by backing business and helping them grasp the opportunity that clean growth represents – we actually improve our economic security, improve our prosperity, improve our way of life.

    The bottom line is this – if we are acting on climate change to preserve our economic prosperity, we have to make sure that climate change action is pro-growth, pro-business.

    That is why our approach will keep the costs of bills down and encourage businesses to innovate, grow and create jobs.

    If we act in the right way, decarbonisation supports our other priorities.

    By focusing on storage and reducing energy demand, not just generating more energy, we also help to meet our energy security needs.

    By focusing on energy efficiency we help keep bills down for people and businesses.

    So what is this Government’s approach?

    We are committed to climate action; committed to economic security; committed to decarbonising at the least cost.

    Pro-growth climate action

    In December, world leaders will gather in Paris to finalise the first truly global agreement to limit greenhouse gas emissions.

    The UK is lined up with the progressive countries of the world on this.

    We want a strong, ambitious, rules-based agreement that makes the shift to a clean global economy irreversible.

    Why? Because that is the best way to convince the private sector and investors we mean business.

    Without the commitment, energy and innovation of private enterprise – across the world – we will not succeed in making the transformation to the global low-carbon economy we need.

    Governments can set the direction, set the vision, set the ambition.

    We can create the framework, create the rules, provide the support, predictability and stability needed.

    But that support must help technologies eventually stand on their own two feet, not to encourage a permanent reliance on subsidy.

    The best way to deliver on this is through the way we know the economics will work best.

    Using the markets.

    Using free enterprise and competition to drive down the costs of climate action.

    To develop new technologies.

    With business recognising the opportunity for growth, and yes profit too, that a clean economy represents.

    Just like our own economy at home, the global low-carbon economy needs to be a profitable economy of enterprise, competition, opportunity and growth.

    What I am not going to do as Energy and Climate Change Secretary is waste any time re-running old arguments about whether climate change is happening or not.

    Tuesday’s joint communique from the UK’s top academic institutions sets out the science clearly and the risks if we don’t act.

    World leaders in the US, Europe, China and elsewhere, are united.

    We need to act together. And we should be strong and decisive.

    But how we act is equally important.

    It cannot be left to one part of the political spectrum to dictate the solution and some of the loudest voices have approached climate action from a left wing perspective.

    So I can understand the suspicion of those who see climate action as some sort of cover for anti-growth, anti-capitalist, proto-socialism.

    But it was Margaret Thatcher who first put climate change on the international agenda.

    She told the World Climate Conference in 1990 that “The danger of global warming is real enough for us to make changes and sacrifices, so that we do not live at the expense of future generations.”

    I agree.

    This is equally an issue for those of us who believe a sustainable free-market delivers the best results for hard-working families.

    The Governor of the Bank of England, the President of the World Bank and the Managing Director of the IMF have all spoken out about the economic risks that climate change will bring.

    But in her 2002 book ‘Statecraft’, Margaret Thatcher was also sensible enough to ask the question “can global warming be checked at an acceptable price?”

    And that remains a live issue. So let’s deal with that now in the domestic context.

    Controlling costs

    The transition to a clean economy here in the UK does mean making up-front investment supported by the tax-payer – and in energy – from bill payers. Let’s not pretend it doesn’t.

    This is used to develop clean energy supplies and to help people cut their bills by cutting energy waste.

    For instance, the Coalition Government put in place the Levy Control Framework to support the growth of low-carbon energy – renewables, nuclear, biomass and other budding technologies such as carbon capture and storage.

    By 2020, this framework will have provided around £40bn to support a clean energy boom.

    Renewables, for instance, are likely to be providing over 30% of Britain’s electricity by the end of this Parliament – up from just 7% in 2010.

    But the Levy Control Framework is a capped pot of money, because it is paid for through energy bills.

    The burden is shouldered by the public – households and businesses.

    We have a duty to protect consumers and keep bills as low as possible while we reduce emissions.

    To work for everyone – and to maintain support for climate action – decarbonisation has to be sensitive to the impact it has on people’s pockets, and wider economic circumstances.

    And that means we have to control public subsidies – taking tough decisions on what schemes and projects are supported.

    The latest projections from the Office of Budget Responsibility show that we are likely to breach the Levy Control Framework cap by around £1.5bn by 2020.

    This is due to a number of factors including falling wholesale prices, technological improvements and increased deployment under “demand-led” support schemes.

    That is why this week have announced proposals to control costs including closing the Renewables Obligation early for small scale solar farms in the same way we have for onshore wind.

    We still need renewable energy to continue growing and I understand that the industry needs certainty so they can continue to invest in the UK, supporting jobs and growth.

    That is why existing investment has been protected.

    And we intend to set out plans for continuing support beyond 2020, providing a basis for electricity investment into the next decade.

    But we need to reduce our emissions in the most cost-effective way.

    This is a long term transformation.

    We have to pace ourselves so that energy bills remain affordable for households, business remains competitive, and the economy remains secure.

    We have to travel in step with what is happening in the rest of the world.

    And over the last decade a lot has been changing.

    Clean growth

    While we in the UK have been one of the pioneers, we are not a lone outrider.

    Globally, the pro-growth, pro-market, business community has seized the climate change agenda.

    The last 10 years has seen a dramatic boom in global clean energy investment.

    Renewables accounted for nearly half of all new power generation capacity in 2014 with investment reaching $270bn.

    The latest report from the New Climate Economy Commission published this month tracks the positive developments.

    Green bond investments tripled in the last year.

    40 countries have adopted or are planning carbon pricing.

    Over 150 multi-nationals, including oil companies are using carbon pricing to guide their investment decisions.

    One of the most positive developments is the momentum building to phase out inefficient fossil fuel subsidies that encourage consumption.

    As the Prime Minister told the UN last September, these fossil fuel subsidies are “economically and environmentally perverse”.

    The IEA have estimated that globally they run to almost $550bn a year.

    The UK does not subsidise fossil fuel consumption, and we are working with the G20 and others to bring them down.

    International action needs to be well co-ordinated and ambitious, which is why I am looking at ways of taking this forward.

    For instance, I can announce today the UK is throwing its weight behind the Friends of Fossil Fuel Subsidy Reform Communique to be launched at the climate change talks in Paris this year.

    All this pro-growth, pro-business climate action is now bearing fruit?

    For the first time in 40 years we have seen global economic growth without a rise in energy related carbon dioxide emissions.

    And that trend is being ably demonstrated here in the UK.

    Provisional figures show that while the UK economy grew by 2.6% in 2014, CO2 emissions fell by 10%.

    Indeed, the UK economy is becoming ever more energy efficient – even after adjusting for temperature we are consuming less energy for every pound earned.

    In 2014, the energy intensity of the economy fell by 5.6%, the highest fall in the last 10 years.

    The traditional link between economic growth and burning fossil fuels is being broken.

    And this is critically important for the Paris climate change talks.

    We need to convince developing countries that the agreement is not designed to hold them back, but to help them leap forward.

    So let me turn to those international talks.

    Paris 2015

    Getting a global deal on climate change in Paris in December is one of my highest priorities this year.

    And all the signs are that a deal is in reach. There is still a long way to go and there is no room for complacency.

    Key for me will be to ensure three things:

    • First – that the deal must keep the global 2 degrees goal within reach, because that is what the science tells us will avoid the worst effects of climate change – and so that must remain our ambition.
    • Second – the deal must include a set of legally binding rules that give us confidence that countries will deliver on their commitments.
    • Third – that we agree a process of regular five yearly reviews where we can increase our global ambition, taking account of what the science says is required and taking advantage of the increasingly lower costs of renewables and advances in technology.

    As a whole, the deal needs to send a clear signal that the future is low carbon.

    By doing that we will change investment incentives and unleash the private sector to lead the transformation that we need.

    Intended Nationally Determined Contributions have been received covering 46 countries responsible for over 58% of emissions, including the EU, US, China, South Korea, Mexico, Russia and Canada.

    And more are expected over the summer including from Australia, Brazil and India.

    In September the United Nations Environment Programme will report on the aggregate of individual proposals and at that point we can judge what more the world needs to do.

    And that will include helping vulnerable countries adapt to unavoidable climate change.

    Climate finance will form an important part of any deal and the UK has been playing a leading role in supporting private sector involvement in developing countries to help with climate change impacts.

    The insurance industry has a role to play here. The Africa Risk Capacity project helps countries lower premiums for farmers facing increasing drought conditions.

    Between now and December I will be working hard with my counterparts in the EU and with others, to land this deal.

    The conference in Paris is crucial. But it will not be the end of the process, nor the end of the story.

    I have no doubt further action will be needed beyond Paris to maintain the ambition we have set ourselves.

    That is why getting the right rules in place, and agreeing to ratchet up ambition as conditions allow will be so important.

    Conclusion

    Let me finish today on this note.

    The business community is engaged as never before as one of the leading voices for climate action.

    Because you recognise the risks and you recognise the rewards.

    And we need you to continue to speak up for a global deal, to continue to invest, to innovate, to drive the clean economy forward.

    To demonstrate that action to tackle climate change isn’t an indulgence. It makes cold hard economic sense.