We need to make sure that we don't get fleeced over our energy bills by the members of the 'Big 6 Energy Cartel' - who have made fat profits over the years at our expense. Here in Wales we need to change the rules of the game and to create a
national energy company for Wales to generate sustainable and reasonably priced
energy, which can also be part of the solution to create a low carbon
society. We need to establish and develop a national energy company, Ynni
Cymru, which should be run as a not-for-dividend company at arms-length from
the Welsh Government.
Its time for a national energy company for Wales |
This is a vision for energy and the
environment for a Wales that reduces its carbon emissions, harnesses its
natural resources sustainably, and seizes opportunities in the low-carbon and
circular economies. The link between energy and climate change is clear. A number of actions could fall into the
remit of Ynni Cymru, including: reducing the cost per unit of energy to homes
and businesses in Wales, reducing the consumption of energy in homes and
businesses and helping consumers to make informed decisions based on smart
metering technology.
Ynni Cymru should be tasked with funding
the mass installation, outsourced to local companies, of solar panels on the
roofs of households, business premises and lampposts in Wales, beginning with
public buildings and social housing. The company would coordinate
and facilitate the use of publicly owned land for renewable energy purposes.
The company could finance the
acquisition and development of new large-scale generating and storage capacity,
ensuring Wales becomes self-sufficient in renewable energy and becomes a
renewable energy exporter. It could boost our energy market by
ensuring the development of a national producer cooperative among community
energy organisations.
The problem we face is that our energy
production and distribution model was restructured to primarily benefit the big
6 energy cartel members, their interests and their (City) profits. From the
perspective of energy consumers and smaller scale energy producers, or anyone
who wants things to change the problem is that all the Westminster based
political parties have quietly bought into this cartel dominated model of
energy production and ownership (or perhaps more truthfully were quietly
bought).
The reality is that the UK’s cartel
dominated model for energy production and distribution is not necessarily the
norm everywhere in Europe or around the world. Now contrary to what you might
think, and here from Westminster; realistic alternatives exist and actually
prosper, a particularly good example of a balanced and healthy energy mix can
be found in Germany. Small may very well be beautiful, even with a
geographically sizeable state, especially in relation to energy, in 2012 some
22% of the countries energy came from small scale green entrepreneurs.
Community based co-operatives (both
urban and rural), farmers and homeowners are part of the 1.3 million renewable
energy producers and part of the energy mix. In Germany, citizens’,
cooperatives, and communities own more than half of German renewable capacity.
Small-scale electricity generation is having a knock on effect encouraging
change throughout the energy system.
Burger Energie Berlin - literally Berlin Citizens Energy |
In Berlin, a cooperative (Burger
Energie Berlin – literally Berlin Citizens Energy) continues to strive to take
control of the capital's electricity grid with some 35,000km of underground
cables. The cooperative is a free, cross-party coalition of citizens who are
committed to a sustainable, sustainable and democratic energy policy in Berlin.
Members have one vote regardless of the amount their deposit and anyone who
wants the power network to be in civil hand, is welcome.
Ordinary Berliners have invested their
cash in the venture with the intention of producing a reliable 100 per cent
renewable energy supply. The aim is to promote the integration of renewable
energy into the grid and to invest a portion of the profits from this directly
into the transition to renewable energy. At present the Berlin electricity grid
remains run by Vattenfall regularly generates millions in profits, members of
the co-operative believe that the profits from the grid operation should flow
to Berlin’s citizens.
This is grass roots energy generation
that has potentially the power to change the nature of the energy supply system
(in Germany and elsewhere). They aim to build an energy grid that is better
handle the rise of green power and allows local use of locally produced energy.
This may well be a case of small being both beautiful and perhaps deeply
disturbing from the perspective of Westminster and Cardiff Bay something that
it is both community beneficial and community owned.
In Germany, there is a deliberate
promoted policy of energy transition (or ‘Energiewende’) – this is a very
different approach to what is practised in these islands (at least south of the
Scottish border). For a start the ‘Energiewende’ is driven by a desire to
reduce and eliminate any dependency on nuclear energy.
The introduction of the Feed-in-tariff (EEG)
in 2008 was an important part of this process, along with (post Fukushima)
the almost unanimous across the board political commitment to a wide range of
targets (in 2011) which included a commitment to reduce energy demand (with a
50% reduction in primary energy use by 2050) and the achievement
of an 80% renewable electricity share of total consumption (by 2050). This has
resulted in a significant uptake of renewables in Germany.
The real striking difference is that the
operation of the grid in Germany means that generated renewable electricity is
used first and that distribution network operators (DNOs) are also seeking to
reduce demand. This is so radically different from the way the energy is
generated, distributed, exported and used here in our country.
A significant difference, aside from the
scale and pattern of investment (in Germany), is that small businesses,
co-operatives, individual households and local authorities benefit from
investment distributed by a network of local banks (something we pretty much
entirely lack in Wales). The whole thing is supported by the KfW (state
investment bank) to the tune of 23.3 billion euro in the area of
environment and climate protection (2012 figures).
These developments are a million miles
away from the so-called ‘Free market’ for energy that exists in the UK, which
is pretty dominated by the ‘Big 6’ energy cartel members. The fact that some
former politicians have found rewarding post political career employment within
the energy sector may be co-incidental but suggests that there is little desire
for improvement within Westminster.
The way the current set up works, it is
difficult to imagine ‘a Government’ at most levels (at least outside of
Scotland and perhaps Northern Ireland) in the UK grasping the concept, the
practicalities and real possibilities of genuine community owned beneficial
energy generation projects. Pending some real change in the way energy policy
works we are all pretty much trapped with a real lack of meaningful choice or
realistic alternatives when it comes to customers securing domestic energy from
the big 6 cartel members.
What we have had is years of visionless New Labour and Conservative governments in Westminster, which have been hand in glove with despotic oil and gas-producing regimes in the Middle East who have had has little real interest in renewables. Teresa May’s wobbly and unstable Westminster government, along with its predecessor continues to actively work to pull the rug out from under the renewables sector by cutting the feed in tariff something that has cost highly skilled jobs here in Wales.
What we have had is years of visionless New Labour and Conservative governments in Westminster, which have been hand in glove with despotic oil and gas-producing regimes in the Middle East who have had has little real interest in renewables. Teresa May’s wobbly and unstable Westminster government, along with its predecessor continues to actively work to pull the rug out from under the renewables sector by cutting the feed in tariff something that has cost highly skilled jobs here in Wales.
No comments:
Post a Comment