Committee on Climate Change - New low-carbon electricity generation is cost-effective option for UK power sector investment in 2020s and beyond

26 Oct 2015 10:16 AM

A low-carbon electricity supply is the most cost-effective way to meet the need for more generation in the 2020s given the UK’s climate change commitments, the Committee on Climate Change (CCC) said recently.

In a new report, Power sector scenarios for the fifth carbon budget, the Committee sets out a range of future options to reduce the UK’s emissions from electricity in 2030. Low-carbon options in the power sector are important to support emissions reduction in other sectors, such as transport and heating, as well as to reduce emissions from the power sector itself.

The new power sector scenarios seek to balance issues of affordability, security of supply and decarbonisation. They indicate different ways, rather than one prescriptive path, through which this balance can be achieved consistent with UK climate change targets.

Power sector scenarios for the fifth carbon budget sets out new analysis the CCC will take into account when it provides its advice to Government on the fifth carbon budget on 26 November 2015. The fifth carbon budget will set the maximum level of domestic emissions between 2028 and 2032 and marks the half-way point from the first carbon budget period (2008-2012) to the 2050 commitment to reduce UK emissions by at least 80% relative to 1990 levels.

Assessing the UK’s obligations under the Climate Change Act, alongside the requirement to ensure competitiveness, affordability and security of the UK power supply, the Committee finds that:

Lord Deben, Chair of the Committee on Climate Change, said: “The 2020s are crucial in setting the direction for UK power generation, and to ensure the UK can meet its 2050 climate change commitments cost-effectively. The key tools are already in place to deliver the investment in low-carbon generation that is required. The Government must now urgently clarify the direction of future policy to ensure the power sector can decarbonise at lowest cost to businesses and households.”