RSS Feed     Twitter     Facebook

Posts Tagged ‘Renewable energy’

Your chance to quiz Eon on energy

Put your questions on coal, fossil fuels and renewables to the chief executive of the German energy firm Eon

Under the You Ask, They Answer microscope this week is the German energy giant Eon and its chief executive, Paul Golby. The company runs fossil fuel power stations, windfarms and biomass plants across the UK. Most controversially it has been attacked by environmental campaigners for its plan to open the first new coal-fired power station in the UK for 20 years at Kingsnorth, in Kent. It also has plans to build two new nuclear power stations and is a major investor in the £2.2bn London Array offshore wind farm. Golby has described anti-coal protesters as “a little naive”.

This is your chance to put your questions direct to Paul Golby and to Eon. How do you feel about expanding coal generation in the UK and new nuclear power stations? Are coal protesters “naive”? Should the company be doing more to invest in renewables? Or should it be paying more attention to keeping customer bills low?

Golby will be live online between 11am and noon on Monday. For the rest of the week until Friday afternoon a team of Eon staff will tackle other questions and comments on the blog. They are:

Emily Highmore – Senior media and communications officer

Tim Pyke – Climate manager

Sara Vaughan – director of regulation & energy policy

Jonathan Smith – PR and media relations manager

Please post your questions below.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Your chance to quiz Eon on energy

Put your questions on coal, fossil fuels and renewables to the chief executive of the German energy firm Eon

Under the You Ask, They Answer microscope this week is the German energy giant Eon and its chief executive, Paul Golby. The company runs fossil fuel power stations, windfarms and biomass plants across the UK. Most controversially it has been attacked by environmental campaigners for its plan to open the first new coal-fired power station in the UK for 20 years at Kingsnorth, in Kent. It also has plans to build two new nuclear power stations and is a major investor in the £2.2bn London Array offshore wind farm. Golby has described anti-coal protesters as “a little naive”.

This is your chance to put your questions direct to Paul Golby and to Eon. How do you feel about expanding coal generation in the UK and new nuclear power stations? Are coal protesters “naive”? Should the company be doing more to invest in renewables? Or should it be paying more attention to keeping customer bills low?

Golby will be live online between 11am and noon on Monday. For the rest of the week until Friday afternoon a team of Eon staff will tackle other questions and comments on the blog. They are:

Emily Highmore – Senior media and communications officer

Tim Pyke – Climate manager

Sara Vaughan – director of regulation & energy policy

Jonathan Smith – PR and media relations manager

Please post your questions below.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Could energy bonds help save world?

The idea is one of 20 radical solutions to the threat of global warming to be proposed during presentations at a conference in Manchester this weekend

The British public could invest their savings in the UK’s renewable energy revolution and reap the financial rewards of helping to save the planet, under ambitious plans to be discussed this weekend.

The Public Interest Research Centre, a thinktank based in Wales, says the government could sell “energy bonds” to pay for the required investment. The scheme would be similar to war bonds, which galvanised financial support in Britain during the second world war.

The idea is one of 20 radical solutions to the threat of global warming to be proposed during presentations this weekend in Manchester. The event, organised by the Guardian and the Manchester International festival, will publish a report on the ideas, which will be distributed ahead of key UN talks on a new climate treaty in Copenhagen in December.

Tim Helweg-Larsen, director of the Public Interest Research Centre, said: “To finance renewable energy on the scale required, Britain is going to need hundreds of billions of pounds. Energy bonds are a way to unlock large amounts of money from individuals and institutional investors.”

He added: “Make no mistake, this is an incredibly expensive project, but it also has very good rates of return on investments. We should be creating the opportunity for the people of Britain to invest in their own future and a secure climate.”

People and companies would buy the bonds over the internet or at Post Offices, he said, investing anything from £10 to millions. The money raised would be dedicated to investment in offshore wind turbines and other clean energy projects. Fixed returns, backed by the government, could be paid at regular intervals, or after a decade or so when the fund matured. The increase in money paid back would be linked to the likely increase in electricity prices.

The large amounts of public investment raised by such a scheme could provoke awkward questions about how it would be allocated in Britain’s liberalised electricity market, where infrastructure such as wind turbines are largely built and operated by power companies. Helweg-Larsen said nationalisation would not be needed. An investment corporation could be set up to spend the money, either by building generation capacity directly, or by subcontracting the work to existing operators. War bonds worked in a similar way he said, with the money from the public used to pay private firms to make weapons and munitions.

Other climate-saving ideas to be discussed at the Manchester event include practical suggestions, such as alternative fuels from algae to hydrogen, as well as ways to convert the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide to methanol. Others will discuss more controversial ideas such as tighter controls on global population and rethinking conventional models of economic growth.

Stephen Salter, an engineer at Edinburgh University, who was responsible for the “Salter’s Duck” wave energy device, will present his latest idea: a form of geoengineering that uses ships to seed clouds over the ocean, designed to block sunlight.

The ideas will be judged by a panel of experts led by Lord Tom Bingham, former lord chief justice, and including Dan Reicher, director of climate change and energy at Google.org, and author Chris Goodall.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


RBS: the sustainable bank?

Sustainable Development Commission launches 275 ‘breakthrough’ ideas to ‘inspire and motivate policy makers’

The Royal Bank of Scotland, which is 70% owned by the public, should be transformed into the Royal Bank of Sustainability with a brief to back renewable energy, improve public transport, and to raise money to resolve Britain’s housing crisis.

The suggestion is one of 275 potential “breakthrough” ideas submitted by members of the public to the Sustainable Development Commission (SDC) to improve the quality of people’s lives, increase community involvement and make Britain a fairer society.

Other suggestions include a radical switching of 20% of all health spending towards preventing illness rather than treatments by 2020, getting young people more connected to the natural world by holding more classes outdoors, and turning under-used city land into urban farms.

“Compared to the combined governments’ response to the implosion in the capital markets the response to civilisation-threatening crises [has been] stumbling and uninspired… We seem bogged down on so many fronts. We wanted to bring together a dynamic portfolio of ideas that could really inspire and motivate policy makers and others to set the UK much more decisively on the path to becoming a sustainable society,” says the report entitled Breakthroughs for the Twenty-First Century, which is published tomorrow.

Many of the ideas, like making cycling mainstream and setting up low carbon zones to reduce emissions and combat health problems, are not new but need invigorating, says the report. Others, like using algae to capture emissions, are controversial. But together, said outgoing SDC chief Jonathon Porritt, the 275 ideas could reinvigorate the political process.

One suggestion, known to be gaining ground in the Treasury, aims to raise billions of pounds to reduce carbon emissions by releasing “green bonds’ which would be issued and backed by government. Like standard government bonds (known as gilts) these would be super-safe investments that guaranteed a fixed interest rate, but the money would be ring-fenced for environmental spending by government.

Another suggestion, from the Yorkshire village of Todmorden, would set up a national competition to inspire towns and communities to grow more food grown in both public and private spaces. “Food is the trigger for greater involvement with the big issues such as climate change and health,” said Pam Warhurst of Todmorden.

In addition to inviting people from every walk of life to contribute ideas, the authors of the report surveyed groups of young people who told them that what mattered most was the quality of their environment, better transport, fairness, education, sustainable food and farming and the need for leadership.

But some ideas are very unlikely to go down well with the present or even the next government. “What I truly honestly believe would improve the lives of every single person in this country is an end to the capitalist free-market system. If the human race is ever going to progress then it will only be done by a socialist alternative to materialism,” said a youth, identified only as “Fred, from the SW”.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Nuclear industry accused over Irena

Critics say France is using debate about where to base new Irena global renewables body to co-opt organisation

The nuclear power industry has been accused of trying to muscle in on plans to establish a global body to represent the renewable energy industry at a key meeting in Egypt tomorrow.

France – a major user and exporter of nuclear technologies – is accused by critics of trying to win the top job inside the renewable organisation so it can move the International Renewable Energy Agency (Irena) towards being a promoter of “low-carbon” technologies – including atomic power.

The talks in Sharm el-Sheikh are already threatening to become a major standoff between Germany and the United Arab Emirates over which country should win the right to have the headquarters of Irena based in its country.

France, which recently signed a nuclear co-operation agreement with the UAE, is supporting Abu Dhabi. It also wants one of its own civil servants, Hélène Peloss, to be given the top role.

Britain, which only signed up for membership on Friday, has given no indication whether it plans to cast its vote in favour of Bonn or Abu Dhabi, while the US is expected to join Irena in Egypt and then lend its support to Germany.

Karsten Sach, an official in the German environment ministry with responsibility for Irena, said he was “very optimistic” that his country would be chosen but he refused to be drawn on the competition with Abu Dhabi or the role of France.

“I think we have an excellent offer in terms of experience, policy frameworks and vibrant research but we are not campaigning against any other offer,” he argued.

Bonn is considered by many to be the more obvious location because the renewables agency was the brainchild of the Germans, who have led the way in the clean technology sector through its determined championing of solar power. The promoters of Bonn are also suggesting that the Danish renewables policy expert Hans Jørgen Koch should be chosen as director general.

But Abu Dhabi, in the UAE, is pushing its claims to host Irena by emphasising its new commitment to clean technology through the construction of the hugely ambitious, low-carbon Masdar City project. It is also arguing that a developing country rather than the west is better placed to pursue the vital north-south dialogue needed to beat global warming.

At previous planning meetings for Irena, the French have talked about “low-carbon” technologies, encouraging speculation about its ultimate motives.

Eric Martinot, a senior research director with the Institute for Sustainable Energy Policies in Tokyo, and a former environment specialist at the World Bank, told the Huffington Post, an online newspaper, that the French manoeuvres should be resisted.

“An Irena located in Abu Dhabi under such circumstances would be ‘nuclear tainted’ because the negotiating process used to select a host country would be based on support for nuclear power,” said Martinot.

“Are the original goals of Irena being co-opted so that renewables become a mere appendage to a nuclear agenda? ‘Sprinkling some renewables on top of our nuclear power’?” he asked.

More than 100 countries have signed up to the new organisation, although the US and China have yet to do so. Sach said he was hopeful that the US might join in Egypt and that China would eventually come on board.

The renewable agency will have a mandate to disseminate knowledge, develop regulatory framework and to actively promote the widespread adoption of renewable energy technologies around the world.

It comes ahead of vital new talks in Copenhagen at the end of this year about how to tackle global warming and amid excitement that the US and China are finally starting to play more constructive roles compared with the past.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Energy bills must rise to be green

Royal Society report says current government policy is not enough to pay for green technology

Consumers will need to pay more for energy if the UK is to have any chance of developing the technologies needed to tackle climate change, according to a group of leading scientists and engineers.

In a Royal Society study to be published today, the experts said that the government must put research into alternatives to fossil fuel much higher among its priorities, and argued that current policy in the area was “half-hearted”.

“We have adapted to an energy price which is unrealistically low if we’re going to try and preserve the environment,” John Shepherd, a climate scientist at Southampton University and co-author of the report said. “We have to allow the economy to adapt to higher energy prices through carbon prices and that will then make things like renewables and nuclear more economic, as carbon-based alternatives become more expensive.”

Shepherd admitted higher energy costs would be a hard sell to the public, but said it was not unthinkable. Part of the revenue could be generated by a carbon tax that took the place of VAT, so that the cost of an item took into account the energy and carbon footprint of a product. This would allow people to make appropriate decisions on their spending, and also raise cash for research into alternatives.

“Our research expenditure on non-fossil energy sources is 0.2% of what we spend on energy itself,” said Shepherd. “Multiplying that by 10 would be a very sensible thing to do. We’re spending less than 1% on probably the biggest problem we’ve faced in many decades.”

He said that the priority should be to decarbonise the UK’s electricity supply. Measures such as the government’s recent support for electric cars, he said, would be of no use unless the electricity they used came from carbon-free sources.

Though the creation of the Department of Energy and Climate Change (DECC) was a good move, Shepherd said: “We’ve had a lot of good talk but we still have remarkably little in the way of action.”

He cited the recent DECC proposals on carbon capture and storage (CCS) as an example. The department plans to legislate that any new coal-fired power station must demonstrate CCS on a proportion of its output. Once the technology is proven, a judgment made by the EnvironmentAgency around 2020, power plants would have five years to scale up to full CCS.

Shepherd said the proposals were not bold enough. “Really, it needs to be ‘no new coal unless you have 90% emissions reductions by 2020′. That is achievable and, if that were a clear signal, industry would get on and do it. It’s taken a long time for that signal to come through and now that it has, it’s a half-hearted message.”

A spokesperson for DECC argued that its proposed regulatory measures were “the most environmentally ambitious in the world, and would see any new coal power stations capturing at least 20-25% of their carbon emissions from day one”.

Ed Miliband, energy and climate change secretary, said that a white paper due next month will lay out how Britain will source its energy for the coming decades.

“This white paper will be the first time we’ve set out our vision of an energy mix in the context of carbon budgets and climate change targets. We have identified ways to tackle the challenges – we will need a mix of renewables, clean fossil fuels and nuclear and we’re already making world-leading progress in those areas. It’s a transition plan, a once in a generation statement of how the UK will make the historic and permanent move to a low-carbon economy with emissions cut by at least 80% in the middle of the century.”

The Royal Society report will argue that energy policy has been too fragmented and short-term in its outlook, with a tendency to hunt for silver-bullet solutions to climate change. “That really isn’t the case. What we need is a portfolio of solutions, horses for courses,” said Shepherd.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


BP shuts alternative energy HQ

• ‘Beyond Petroleum’ boast in doubt as clean energy boss quits
• Renewables budget will be reduced by up to £550m this year

BP has shut down its alternative energy headquarters in London, accepted the resignation of its clean energy boss and imposed budget cuts in moves likely to be seen by environmental critics as further signs of the oil group moving “back to petroleum”.

But Tony Hayward, the group’s chief executive, said BP remained as committed as ever to exploring new energy sources and the non-oil division would benefit from the extra focus of being brought back in house.

BP Alternative Energy was given its own headquarters in County Hall opposite the Houses of Parliament two years ago and its managing director, Vivienne Cox, oversaw a small division of 80 staff concentrating on wind and solar power.

But the 49-year-old Cox – BP’s most senior female executive, who previously ran renewables as part of a larger gas and power division now dismantled by Hayward – is standing down tomorrow.

This comes alongside huge cuts in the alternative energy budget – from $1.4bn (£850m) last year to between $500m and $1bn this year, although spending is still roughly in line with original plans to invest $8bn by 2015.

The move back to BP’s corporate headquarters at St James’s Square in London’s West End made sense, particularly when the group was sitting on spare office space due to earlier cutbacks, said Hayward.

“We are going through a major restructuring and bringing the alternative energy business headquarters into the head office seems a good idea to me.

“It saves money and brings it closer to home … you could almost see it as a reinforcement [of our commitment to the business],” he said.

Cox was stepping down to spend more time with her children, Hayward added. “I know you would love to make a story out of all this,” he said, “but it’s quite hard work.”

The reason for the departure of Cox is variously said by industry insiders to be caused by frustration over the business being downgraded in importance or because she really does intend to stay at home more with her young children. Cox had already reduced her working week down to three days and had publicly admitted the difficulty of combining different roles.

She will be replaced by another woman, her former deputy Katrina Landis, but the moves will worry those campaigning for more women in business, especially as Linda Cook, Shell’s most senior female executive, has recently left her job too.

BP has gradually given up on plans to enter the UK wind industry and concentrated all its turbine activities on the US, where it can win tax breaks and get cheaper and easier access to land.

In April the company closed a range of solar power manufacturing plants in Spain and the US with the loss of 620 jobs and Hayward has publicly questioned whether solar would ever become competitive with fossil fuels, something that goes against the current thinking inside the renewables sector.

Hayward has also moved BP into more controversial oil areas, such as Canada’s tar sands, creating an impression that he has given up on the objectives of his predecessor, Lord Browne, to take the company “Beyond Petroleum”.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds