“Energy bills will go up with independence” - Davey
9 Apr 2014 03:12 PM
Edward Davey made the
positive case for the UK’s single energy market, showing how independence
would increase people’s energy bills.
Launching the UK Government’s
Energy Paper analysing the potential impact of independence on
Scotland’s energy, Edward Davey MP, Secretary of State for Energy and
Climate Change, made the positive case for the UK’s single energy market,
showing how independence would increase people’s energy
bills.
Speaking to a conference of
energy industry stakeholders in Edinburgh, Edward Davey argued that because the
single UK energy market is ten times the size of Scotland’s energy
market, Scottish energy bills are lower. He listed a range of reasons,
including the way investment in transmission and distribution networks are
currently shared across the whole of the UK, to the way the subsidies for
energy distribution in remote rural areas like the Scottish Highlands and
Islands are currently paid for by all British consumers not just Scottish bill
payers.
The UK Government’s
analysis shows that energy bills in an independent Scotland would be higher by
at least £38 a year and perhaps by up to £189, once the full cost
of supporting renewables are included.
In addition, if the full costs
of supporting large scale Scottish renewables fell to Scottish bill payers the
total potential increase would rise considerably for businesses as well to
around £110,000 for energy costs for a medium-sized manufacturer in 2020
and £608,000 for a medium sized manufacturer in 2020.
These figures do not include the
costs an independent Scotland would face for its share of decommissioning and
legacy costs for old coal and nuclear industries and oil and gas
infrastructure. Nor do they include the likely increased costs for consumers of
reduced competition.
Secretary of State Edward Davey
said:
“The UK works better
together, and our single energy market shows why. As a United Kingdom, we keep
energy bills down for all consumers, regardless of where they live, and this
works well, especially for people in Scotland.
“Without unrestricted
access to the integrated GB market, the costs of supporting Scottish energy
network investment, small-scale renewables and programmes to support remote
consumers would fall on Scottish bill payers alone – this would add at
least £38 to annual household energy bills and around £110,000 to
energy costs for a medium-sized manufacturer in 2020.
“In addition, if the full
costs of supporting large scale Scottish renewables fell to Scottish bill
payers the total potential increase would rise considerably up to £189
for households and £608,000 for a medium sized manufacturer in
2020”.
“Right across the energy
mix, Scotland benefits from being part of the UK’s strong, stable
consumer and tax base – supporting thousands of jobs, creating new supply
chains and cementing the energy sector as the engine room of the
economy.”
The Secretary of State for
Scotland Alistair Carmichael said:
“This paper shows how the
broad shoulders of the UK benefit Scotland – and how the rest of the UK
benefits from Scotland being part of it.
“Sharing the cost of
research and infrastructure keeps fuel bills down in every part of Scotland,
from the big cities to the most remote communities.
“Scottish ingenuity and
innovation helps the UK lead the way in developing a new energy mix for the
future.”
Notes to
editors:
The analysis breaks down the
costs as follows:
-
up to £6 billion from UK
investment in electricity transmission and distribution networks (almost 30 per
cent of total GB upgrades over the next seven years);
-
some £560 million (28 per
cent of the total) of GB’s support for the renewables sector in FY12/13;
and
-
around £92 million
(2009/10 prices) of approved spending between 2014/15-2020/21 for supplying gas
to remote Scottish communities under the Statutory Independent Undertaking
arrangements;
-
around £54 million in
2013/14 (2013/14 prices) to support the infrastructure needed to distribute
electricity over remote and sparsely populated areas in the north of Scotland
under the Hydro Benefit Replacement Scheme.
- The Scotland Analysis:
Energy paper is available on GOV.UK
- Written Ministerial
Statement by Edward Davey