News

Listen

Green initiatives will save householders £94 a year

14/05/2012

Energy Minister Fergus Ewing today welcomed analysis which shows that household bills will be lower with green policies and renewable energy than if we continue with the status quo.

The Department for Energy and Climate Change estimates that consumer bills by 2020 will be £94 lower with low carbon policies than without them. 

The figures show that low carbon energy policies and measures could lead to an average household energy bill of £1,285 by 2020, whereas carrying on with business as usual will lead to average bills of £1,379.

The evidence backs up research by industry regulator Ofgem, which has shown household energy bills will be lower with more renewable energy than if we maintain the status quo.

This week Centrica, which owns Scottish Gas, warned that energy prices are likely to rise by as much as £50 a household as wholesale gas prices have risen again.

Scotland has the ambitious, but achievable, target of generating the equivalent of 100 per cent of electricity demand from renewables by 2020.

And new figures release earlier this year show that Scotland is ahead of schedule on its targets, with initial estimates suggesting 35 per cent of Scotland’s electricity needs came from renewables in 2011, beating the interim target of 31 per cent.

Meeting Scotland’s target of the equivalent of 100 per cent of Scotland’s electricity demand coming from renewables by 2020 will also deliver around 30 per cent of the UK Government’s renewable electricity requirements, helping the UK meet their legal obligations.

In 2010, Scotland exported 20.8 per cent of its electricity to the rest of the UK – a figure set to rise as we increasingly exploit our vast renewable resource and build the infrastructure upgrades we need.

Energy Minster Fergus Ewing said:

“Renewable energy is vital to Scotland and to the rest of the UK. It is essential if we are to keep bills down for ordinary families, boost the economy and meet our climate change targets.

“DECC figures show that every family in the United Kingdom will have energy bills nearly £100 lower in 2020 with low carbon initiatives than if we continue with the status quo.

“Ofgem’s Project Discovery has shown that renewable energy will actually lead to cheaper energy in the future than carrying on with traditional energy sources.

”Figures show bills for gas and electricity rose by £445 between 2004 and 2010, and that two-thirds of this rise was the result of increases in wholesale costs – precisely why we need to invest in our own secure energy supply.

“This week, Centrica, the company which owns Scottish Gas, warned that energy prices are likely to rise yet again by as much as £50 a household.

“Renewable incentives add only £15-20 to annual household utility bills in Scotland – a valuable investment in keeping future bills down.

“The job and investment opportunities that renewable energy provides to Scotland are too good to miss, with Gamesa recently deciding to invest in Edinburgh rather than Hartlepool, bringing around 800 new jobs to Scotland.

“Industry figures show there are already 11,000 renewables jobs in Scotland and £750 million was invested  in renewable energy over the last year – and this figure is set to rise. There is a pipeline of 17 GW of renewable electricity projects, nearly three times peak Scottish demand, with a total estimated capital investment of £46 billion.

“The United Kingdom needs Scotland’s renewable energy whatever the constitutional future holds –we should take advantage of Scotland’s competitive edge in the renewable energy revolution.”

Related information

  • Read the DECC stats.
  • Scotland exported 20.8 per cent of electricity generated in 2010 to England and Northern Ireland. Earlier this year, Scottish Power and the National Grid announced they have awarded a £1 billion contract to upgrade the grid link between Scotland and England, as part of a wider package of upgrades which will increase capacity from Scotland to England from 3.3 gigawatts (GW) to close to 7GW by 2021.
  • Industry figures show £750 million was invested in renewable energy in Scotland in 2011.
  • There is a pipeline of 17 GW of renewable electricity projects, nearly three times peak Scottish demand, with a total estimated capital investment of £46 billion.
  • There are currently 7 Gigawatts (GW) of renewable projects operational, under construction or consented in Scotland, and it is estimated that Scotland has enough capacity operational and in the planning system to meet up to three quarters of its electricity demand.
  • A recent Scottish Renewables report showed that the renewables industry supports 11,000 jobs.

Page updated: Saturday, May 12, 2012