Showing posts with label uk. Show all posts
Showing posts with label uk. Show all posts

Monday, 2 December 2013

Why the Carbon Floor Price tax should be scrapped

 

Gareth Stace of the EEF argues the "green levy" review offers the perfect opportunity to axe a tax that is distorting markets and failing to deliver on environmental goals

By Gareth Stace, EEF
31 Oct 2013           
 
 
                                     
                        
Government policy remains deeply divorced from the rhetoric. Readers of BusinessGreen will have already formed a view of the current administration's progress in delivering its ambition to be the "greenest government ever". The pledge that we wouldn't go further than our European competitors is equally laughable. Indeed, Chris Huhne was right to level a charge of hypocrisy against George Osborne for singling out green taxes for inflating energy bills - Osborne has introduced the most perverse "green" tax of them all: the Carbon Price Floor.
The unilateral Carbon Price Floor is a very real threat to the competitiveness of UK manufacturers and will do little to further the government's aim of decarbonising our electricity supplies. Furthermore, it risks undermining the ability of manufacturers to invest and grow. In short we are disadvantaging ourselves without any net environmental benefits. Indeed, we risk weakening incentives across Europe by further depressing prices under the EU ETS.


                       
It was introduced by government with the intention to provide investors in low carbon energy with an additional degree of certain. But EEF has consistently argued that the measure is an unnecessary addition to the support that will be provided by Contracts for Difference.
Treasury Ministers have stated that the Carbon Price Floor will help the UK innovate and invest in the low carbon sector. But the uncertainty over its future price makes it an ineffective way to incentivise low-carbon generation.
Furthermore, if government want us to move to a low carbon economy, with innovation at the heart of the transformation, then why is the R&D spend on energy and environment, as a proportion of total government R&D expenditure, way below the OECD average?
The justification that the Carbon Price Floor is required to provide certainty over the carbon price for investors in new nuclear is particularly flimsy. With no new nuclear likely to be built this decade, the price floor is simply generating windfall gains for existing operators - and the Treasury.
Given the pledge by Osborne that we would not go further than our competitors, the unilateral nature of the Carbon Price Floor smarts. The policy adds costs that aren't borne by other manufacturing operators with which we compete. As a result, we are deeply concerned that this will result in a less competitive UK manufacturing sector.
Embarrassingly, Energy Minister Michael Fallon agrees. In a recent piece in the Daily Telegraph, Fallon is quoted saying: "We shouldn't put British industry at a disadvantage against Europe and the US: for our manufacturers this would be assisted suicide." The piece cites a meeting with Fallon and business leaders in February where he called the Carbon Floor Price "a fairly absurd waste of your money"... before mistakenly stating that the policy had been inherited from Labour.
Let me clear. This is not an issue for energy-intensive companies which, once State Aid issues have been resolved, will benefit from the government's compensation package. This is an issue for mainstream manufacturers for whom rising electricity prices is becoming an increasing concern. Our analysis shows that the Carbon Floor Price, on its own, will increase electricity prices for medium-sized manufacturers by 10 per cent ahead of the next general election in 2015.
And the disparity between the floor price and the carbon price in Europe will remain for the rest of the decade with low EU ETS allowance prices. The current Carbon Floor Price trajectory will mean that as of 2015/16 UK electricity consumers will be paying more than six times as much per tonne of CO2 as our European competitors.
While it is true that today's manufacturing sector is highly innovative and few companies compete on price alone - being competitive on cost is still highly important for a sector which is being driven to export to the rest of the world because of stagnation in European markets.
As well as reducing a company's ability to grow, if firms' profits are being squeezed by an increase in costs that is not borne by their competitors it can make the difference between investing and not investing. Or the difference between investing in the UK or elsewhere.
The Prime Minister's announced review of green taxes presents the ideal time to plan for the Carbon Floor Price's demise.
Green taxes must to what they say on the tin. We need green taxes to be effective in driving desirable behaviours. We need the Treasury to be honest about what it is trying to achieve and set taxation to drive that objective with targeted interventions that support green growth. We need policies that send the right signals to the manufacturing sector to invest in cleaner factories within the UK for the long-term.
The focus on scrapping the Energy Company Obligation is a false flag and risks undermining one of the few policies that can target emission cuts where relatively cheap options still remain. It is the Carbon Floor Price that should be on the block.
Gareth Stace is head of climate and environment policy at manufacturers' association EEF







 

Wednesday, 3 April 2013

The Denial of Science

A review from Learning From Dogs of the recently published book by Martin Lack.
denial of science
In many ways it would be terribly easy to find fault with this book. If it had been written as a book, been through the edits that a new book requires, then published, those faults would be a significant criticism.
But it was not written as a book! It was originally written as an academic text.  As Martin explains in the Preface:
This book is based on research originally undertaken – and a dissertation written – as part of my MA in Environmental Politics from Keele University in Staffordshire (in 2010-2011).
Then in the following paragraph goes on to say:
Academics generally disapprove of the publication of academic research via non-academic, non-peer-reviewed routes.  However, I am trying to reach more than just an academic audience.
Three sentences later:
However, this book retains many of the features of a piece of academic research, …. (All quotes from page viii of the preface)
To a person unaccustomed to reading academic research, as is this reader, the structural and presentational differences between a ‘normal’ non-fiction book and a dissertation are significant.  That needs to be borne in mind as you turn to page one.
OK, now that I have got that off my chest, on to the substance of the review.
Turning to the outside back cover, one sees Martin clearly explaining that the book is not about climate science, rather an analysis of why some people dispute “the reality, reliability and reasonableness of this science.”
That alone justifies the work that Martin put into his research and dissertation and his subsequent decision to adapt his findings into a book.
The pace and scale of the changes that are being visited on Planet Earth is truly frightening.  The number of feedback loops that we are locked into now don’t even bear thinking about.  Just take the continuing and accelerating loss of the Arctic ice-cap and extrapolate that for a couple of decades (touched on in my recent post More new tomorrows and see footnote.)
We are not talking of subtle changes over many generations. We are talking about irreversible and irrevocably massive changes to our environment within the lifetimes of just about every living person on this planet.  (I’m 70 next year and while I have no idea how many years I have left, I rate it as at least 50:50 that before I take my last breath, the coming destruction of biosphere will be blindingly obvious to me, Jean and 99.9% of the world’s population.)
Makes me want to shout out ……

There is not much time left to leave a sustainable world for future generations.  Come on politicians and power-brokers; start acting as though you truly understand the urgency of the situation!

Ah, that feels much better!
Back to the book!
Martin examines 5 categories that display denial behaviours, to a greater or lesser extent.  These categories are: Organisations; Scientists, Economists, Journalists and Politicians. Oh, and a 6th catch-all category: Others.
Each section dealing with a category is structured in the same way: Preliminary Research; Key Findings and Summary.  Tables are used extensively to allow easy review of the findings.
Again, what needs to be hammered out is that this format is very unlike a typical non-fiction book.  Because it’s fundamentally an academic dissertation!  But, so what!
What is important is for the widest possible audience to understand the breadth and extent of the denial going on.  Denial that is, literally, playing with the future of humanity on this planet; the only home we have.
Let me reinforce that last sentence by picking up on what Martin writes on his closing page (p.76):
Furthermore, there is strong circumstantial evidence to suggest that this scepticism is being fuelled by those with a vested interest in the continuance of “business as usual” by seeking to downplay, deny or dismiss the scientific consensus on the extent of ACD.
Martin Lack’s book may be unconventional in many ways.  But as a tool to show how those who deny the science of climate change deny the right of future millions to live in a sustainable manner, it is most powerful.  It is a valuable reference book that should be in every library and every secondary school across the globe!
The Denial of Science is published by AuthorHouse 02/23/2013
oooOOOooo

Wednesday, 19 December 2012

The GIB



Cable launches UK's 'Green Bank'

 

The UK's new Green Investment Bank has been officially launched in Edinburgh.

The bank will have £3bn of government money to invest in areas such as renewable energy, carbon capture and storage and energy efficiency measures.

It will have its headquarters in Edinburgh, and a major presence in London.

The bank was formally opened by the UK Business Secretary Vince Cable, who also announced details of its first investments.

First to benefit from the fund will be a project in the north east of England that will generate energy from waste.

Around £8m will go to the construction of an anaerobic digestion plant at Teesside, the first of six planned over the next five years.

This will be matched with a further £8m from the private sector, according to the government.

The Green Investment Bank (GIB) will also invest £5m to fit manufacturer Kingspan's UK industrial facilities with systems that will reduce its energy consumption by 15%.
Key pledge
The bank had been a key pledge of the coalition government at Westminster.

Its official launch took place at the Heriot-Watt University Conference Centre before an audience of finance and environmental figures.

Mr Cable said the bank would place the green economy "at the heart" of the UK's economic recovery, and position the country at the forefront of the drive to develop clean energy.

He added: "£3bn of government money will leverage private sector capital to fund projects in priority sectors from offshore wind to waste and non-domestic energy efficiency, helping to deliver our commitment to create jobs and growth right across the UK.

"Having the headquarters in Edinburgh is a powerful vote of confidence in the Union, and a testimony to our commitment to helping Scotland lead the green revolution."

The Scottish government had lobbied hard to ensure Edinburgh was chosen as the location for the bank's headquarters.

Scottish energy minister Fergus Ewing said the opening of the bank presented "huge opportunities" for Scottish green energy projects, bringing jobs and investment.

He added: "Edinburgh presents the best Green Investment Bank location for the UK. Not only is the city a major financial centre, but Scotland already leads the world in renewable energy, and has built up world leading expertise from the oil and gas industry."

Dan Barlow, of environmental group WWF Scotland, described the bank launch as an exciting step towards a low carbon economy.

He said: "Significant investment in renewable energy infrastructure and energy efficiency will be critical to meeting UK and Scottish climate targets and securing the green job opportunities available."
'Potential restricted'
The Scottish Greens urged caution over the launch, saying it was hard to see how the bank would "live up to the hype".

The party's enterprise spokesman, Patrick Harvie, said: "Investing in sustainable, clean forms of energy is obvious but this bank isn't being allowed to borrow from the markets so its full potential is being restricted.

"It was also disappointing to hear Vince Cable on his visit to Scotland today refusing to rule out using the bank to support nuclear projects. And of course we know the chancellor is openly hostile to a green route out of recession."

He added: "You really have to question whether this bank will help us shift to a low carbon economy, when both the UK and Scottish governments continue to support fossil fuel extraction and aviation growth."